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9 Ideas for a Stylish Outdoor Space

A good outdoor space is like a living room where there’s always a breeze and you can pick fruit right off the trees. Steal these tips from our Test Garden for your very own oasis

Johanna Silver
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The Gathering Space

As the first magazine to publish photos of homes with sliding doors (1952), decks (1958), and hot tubs (1979), Sunset wrote the book on outdoor living. At our Test Garden, the outdoor room we call the Gathering Space provides an updated take on an outdoor living room, inspiring us to move the party outside. Christian Cobbs, Homestead Design Collective's lead designer took the reins on this room, using it as an opportunity to showcase the low-water, easy-care plants of the Sunset Western Garden Collection. He supplemented with playful additions, like succulents and other drought-tolerant accents. Cobbs describes this garden as “foliage-based,” meaning that the impact comes from colorful leaves rather than fussy flowers. The result is year-round structure and form, with next to no maintenance.

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Upscale picnic

Decomposed granite provides a stable surface for this sophisticated picnic table from Artefact Design & Salvage. Offering some shade are three fruiting olives--one of several ornamental edibles that designer Stefani Bittner snuck into the design.

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Textural affair

A celebration of texture and color, a burgundy ‘Design-A-Line’ Cordyline, silvery, broad-leafed honey bush (Melianthus major), and fountains of Platinum Beauty Lomandra pop against a dark green privet.

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Succulent sea

Agave ovatifolia poke up amid a sea of ‘Chef’s Choice’ rosemary. Lead designer Cobbs chose this variety because it tops out at 18 inches and has a nice mounding effect. It’s also incredibly high in oil content, making it an excellent culinary variety as well.

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Succulent from above

Another view of the ‘Chef’s Choice’ rosemary and artichoke agave combo that we love. We like gazing at the rosette-shaped succulent amidst all those reaching stems. It’s hard to believe that this duo is low-water and low-maintenance.

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Long-lasting centerpiece

For an outdoor tabletop decoration that will outlast any party, opt for a low bowl, packed with succulents of various colors. Use a top dressing of decorative stone to finish the look.

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Afternoon delight

Summer sunshine sets this garden aglow. A fruiting olive offers height. The bright red blooms of ‘Killer Cranberry’ salvia are echoed in the strappy burgundy leaves of two ‘Design-A-Line’ cordyline. At the front corner of the bed, small rosettes of purple Echeveria 'Perle Von Nurnberg’ offer interest at ground level.

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Better together

A clump of ultra-fragrant, variegated ‘Meerlo’ lavender pops next to the tall purple blooms of ‘Love and Wishes’ salvia. This duo takes full sun to part shade and is low-water once established.

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Blue steel

Silvery-blue Agave franzosinii provide drama amidst a sea of low-water, unfussy perennials, including variegated ‘Meerlo’ lavender, red-flowered ‘Killer Cranberry’ salvia, red-tipped 'Obsession' nandina, and lush green ‘Soft Caress’ mahonia--a rare plant that likes conditions both shady and dry.

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Smuggled fruit

Though the Gathering Space is not an edible garden, Homestead Design Collective snuck a few productive plants into the mix--three, to be exact: fruiting olive trees, lavender, and rosemary, all of which provide both beauty and bounty.

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Meet the designers

In a tradition of choosing great talent to partner with (Thomas Church--father of the modern style of California landscape architecture--designed our previous gardens), we turned to the East Bay-based Homestead Design Collective for help executing our vision. Co-owned by a dyed-in-the-wool sustainable gardener, Stefani Bittner, and Alethea Harampolis, a florist known for her wild, garden-inspired designs, Homestead captures the zeitgeist of today’s gardener: an insistence on utility with an uncompromising commitment to beauty. And true to both their values and ours, Sunset’s Test Gardens are maintained without pesticides and fed with organic fertilizer, fish emulsion, and compost.

Our gardens are open to the public daily. Cornerstone: 23570 Arnold Dr., Sonoma; cornerstonesonoma.com.

The following businesses made contributions to the Cornerstone project: Artefact Design & Salvage, Bamboo Pipeline, Sonoma Materials, Succulent Gardens, and Sunset Western Garden Collection. We wish to extend a warm thank-you to all!