This month’s issue of Garden Design Magazine includes a great article on roof garden design that features a wide variety of design styles from across the country. One section of the article gives tips on something few people get excited about when envisioning the perfect rooftop space – walls, fences and guardrails. I mean let’s face it, dreaming up a wall doesn’t sound all that thrilling when you can be planning your organic vegetable garden, figuring out where to put a vine-covered pergola, or selecting the perfect chaise lounge!But of course, there’s more to it. I spoke with firm principal Abie Baldwin about designing roof terrace fences and boundaries and here’s a bit of her designer wisdom:

Roof gardens tend to be smaller than spaces you design on terra firma and so they really lend themselves to being considered as outdoor rooms. Because of this you want to consider how you allow light in and not get too heavy or dark (aesthetically) with your materials. In general, you don’t want to think of a fence or wall as a purely functional element any more than you do inside your home – you want to think about texture, color, pattern and light and then design something that will enhance or support the overall experience of the room. In some cases you may want it to be a feature of your design while in others you may need it to blend in so well that you don’t even notice it.

From a practical standpoint, you want to make sure (with a structural engineer) that any fence or wall you design is structurally sound for the increased wind that you get on your roof. Many of the ‘walls’ we design on roofs are actually more like screens or lattices, which allow more wind to pass through (and permit climbing plants to do their thing).


And now the best part: some pictures to demonstrate! For a bit of context, here is what the roof looked like before it was a garden:

1 before rooftop roof garden design blog hoerrschaudt
2 skyline garden roof garden design blog hoerrschaudt

“After” shot of the same view. Photo credit: Linda Oyama Bryan

Functionally, the frosted plexiglass and ipe-wood shoji screen on this roof terrace blocks views of some of the pvc pipes and a utility area. The ‘wall’ is one of the first design elements you see when entering the roof; it is a border along the main corridor to the deck/seating area, so it sets the tone for materials on the roof (ipe, slate, concrete) and its overall style. Using plexi instead of a solid wood allows for light to come through. Aesthetically, it functions as much as a design element as it does a wall or fence and highlights the forms and patterns of the plantings in front of it.

3 bench flowers green plants roof garden design blog hoerrschaudt

The steel posts that anchor the screen are firmly secured to the roof itself. Roof garden design tip: check with your municipality to see if there are any building codes that restrict height limits on structures that go on a roof as we did with this one. Photo credit: Linda Oyama Bryan

Here is another before/after pair of another area of the roof garden:

4 second before roof roof garden design blog hoerrschaudt
5 outdoor seating roof garden design blog hoerrschaudt

See more of this project on our Facebook page photos, where we’ve posted an article from Chicago Home & Garden magazine that explains more about the roof garden design overall.

To Top