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Annie Elliott Design, Washington DC

Annie Elliott Design

Greater Washington DC

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Small but beautiful urban gardens that make you happy it’s (almost) summer

Annie Elliott | May 23, 2021

I live in a row house, so it’s no surprise that my back garden is pretty tiny.

Taken from the back steps

It faces south, but because the garden is contained by the garage and our two next-door-neighbors’ fences, it doesn’t get a ton of direct sunlight.

The raised beds are deepest on this side of the garden; beds against the garage are the second deepest

It’s a challenge. I’ve become a bit obsessed with the garden this year. I KNOW there’s so much more that could be done, especially on this side:

This is the troublesome side

The raised beds here are less deep front to back, and the roots from the neighboring euonymus sneak under the fence and choke my plants. Nonetheless, I continue to try and figure out what tall thing I can grown here to cover the fence!

Where I don’t have raised beds, I use containers. Coleus LOVES it back here; the Kongs in that largest pot could get up to 30″H!

I’ve always loved city gardens. And even though DC has some beautiful gardens that are open to the public, such as Hillwood

Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens

and Dumbarton Oaks, of course,

The orangery at Dumbarton Oaks
Part of the dreamy garden at Dumbarton Oaks

I’d rather see what real people have done with their small urban spaces. I went on a garden tour in Georgetown many years ago, and the gardens (and the houses!) were divine.

A side garden in Georgetown…
…and the back garden of the same house

Here are a few city gardens I’d love to visit in person. (If one of these is yours, please invite me over!)

Backyard design by Sawyer Gerson. The black fence is EVERYTHING
This one has a vegetable garden!
Even when the overall square footage is small, creating separate areas — at varying heights, if possible — makes an urban garden seem larger
Landscape designer Chris Moss’s own London garden. (Yes, that’s his real name)
Such an oasis — and you gotta love the massive lion dog statues
So lush!
This is more modern than I usually like, but I think the walls and lighting here are genius

One of my all-time favorites is Julianne Moore’s garden in the West Village. Architectural Digest wrote about it in 2016, and I still think about it.

What’s not to love?!

I hope you can bring a little garden greenery into your life, Gentle Readers, just in time for summer.

For more pictures of Julianne Moore’s gorgeous garden, take a peek at my new TikTok channel!

Annie Elliott Design is based in Washington, DC, with satellite offices in St. Michaels, Maryland and in Middlebury, Vermont. Annie’s design work and insights have appeared in numerous local and national publications, including HGTV Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Washingtonian Magazine. 

Category: Color + paint colorTag: backyard, Chris Moss, city garden, Dumbarton Oaks, garden, Hillwood, Julianne Moore, Sawyer Gerson, small yard, townhouse garden, townhouse yard, urban garden, yard

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