Thrifty garden design – and sustainable green recycling design

by Humphry @ 3:53 pm November 17, 2009 -- Filed under: construction materials, garden design, recycled materials for garden construction, thrifty green design   
Recycled steel garden fires thriftily recycle garden wastes - instead of wasting butane on outdoor space heating

Recycled steel garden fires thriftily recycle garden wastes - instead of wasting butane on outdoor space heating

This blog and this website are about high quality designer products for gardens. In the long term, high quality provides the best value because it gives the most use and the most pleasure. We are therefore attracted to thrifty garden design, with ‘thrifty’ meaning ‘a reluctance to spend money unnecessarily’. If we have to spend money, we do it. But if we can do things in a thrifty way –  we like it. Thrifty garden design is related to 

  • recycle garden design
  • green garden design 
  • sustainable garden design

But it is not the same as any of them and it has a very distinghished pedigree. Composting is an ancient garden practice and was done for thrifty reasons. Using local materials was often for thrifty reasons. So was using local plants. Though happy to do what what we can to recycle materials, support a green agenda and save  the planet, we are even happier to work as our gardening predecessors have always worked: thriftily, conscientiously and with restrained good taste. So look at the below  photograph. It shows a thrifty use of garden ‘waste’ to make a beautiful pavilion. We like it. The above image is of a garden firebowl, by Ungers, which recycles garden wood.

Crinklecrankle Fibreglass Planters  are elegant, durable, good for water conservation and a thrifty choice in terms of value for money.

Please let us know of any other beautiful and useful items – we would  be pleased to sell them!

Thrifty and sustainable garden design - recycling branches, rushes and reeds

Thrifty and sustainable garden design - recycling branches, rushes and reeds

1 Comment »

  1. I really like this shelter it would fit in my garden nicely and would create some cool shade in the summer. Handy resouce centre for nesting birds, lots of building material. Great stuff!

    Comment by Magz — May 4, 2010 @ 12:59 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment