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Step Inside This Fairy-Tale Garden Shed

A little ingenuity helps turn recycled materials into a charming garden workspace

story by Kathleen Brenzel
1 /11 Photography by John Granen

Exterior

From the outside, Gail and Mark Dupar’s shed looks like a cozy vacation cabin, or something out of “Hansel and Gretel.” But the cordwood structure is really the nerve center of the couple’s kitchen garden, on Decatur Island in Washington’s San Juans. Here they start seedlings, arrange flowers, raise tomatoes, store tools, and dry freshly harvested shallots on the warm brick floor.

2 /11 Photography by John Granen

Interior

The Dupars built the shed in about two months, using recycled beams from a pier repair project and cedar that they found on a nearby beach and then sliced into rounds. The finishing touch? Yard-sale windows.

3 /11 Photography by John Granen

A place for potting

A 12-foot-long slab of cedar makes a durable workbench.

4 /11 Photography by John Granen

Wall art

Clear glass bottles let light from the greenhouse filter into the main shed. Darker bottles, marbles, and twiggy prunings fill in around them.

5 /11 Photography by John Granen

Fab find

An antique leaded glass window hangs from an overhead beam. It sparkles when backlit by the sun.

6 /11 Photography by John Granen

Thinking light

The shadecloth-covered glass roof helps brighten the 8- by 12-foot greenhouse, where tender plants spend the winter.

7 /11 Photography by John Granen

Easy water

This coil hose reaches all of the greenhouse plants. Find similar hoses at Gardener’s Supply Company (gardeners.com).

8 /11 Photography by John Granen

Staying grounded

The floor consists of brick set in sand atop filter fabric, for easy drainage.

9 /11 Photography by John Granen

No more clutter

A former kitchen cabinet holds vases, seeds, and books. Hand tools are plunged blade down in a sand-filled crock.

10 /11 Photography by John Granen

Bouquet zone

A recycled wood table is where Gail arranges fresh-cut flowers. Excess clippings go into a can beneath it for composting later.

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Idea to steal

Turn flea market finds into planters for tiny succulents (drill holes in the bottoms). Gail Dupar uses them as “gifts to go.”