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Case Study · Washington, DC

A small garden in Northwest DC.

A compact city lot designed as a layered native plant community — four-season interest, dense planting, and adding to the existing trees and shrubs.

Location
Washington, DC · Zone 7b
Scope
Design
Footprint
Small city lot
The design

Layered around an existing tree.

The existing Magnolia kobus set the tone for the whole site — a structural canopy with a calm, established presence the design had to defer to rather than compete with. From there, the plan layers in a small understory tree (Cercis canadensis 'Merlot') for spring color, structural shrubs (Itea virginica 'Little Henry') for fall foliage and summer fragrance, and a deep ground-layer of native perennials, sedges, and grasses underneath.

Galanthus, Crocus, Narcissus, and Alliums carry color from February through June before the warm-season perennials and grasses take over. The whole design is built to fill in densely over two to three seasons — eventually suppressing weeds on its own — and to read as something deliberate from the curb without ever feeling fussy.

Hand-drawn planting plan for the small DC garden
Spring · February – May

Bulbs first, then redbud bloom.

The season opens slowly, then builds — small bulb color through February, redbud and iris through April, alliums into May and June.

Summer · June – September

Coneflower, lily, and soft groundcovers.

The warm season palette: bold native perennials carried by quiet ground-layer texture from sedge and grass.

Fall · September – November

Fall foliage and dried flowers.

When the native shrubs and grasses turn, the whole composition shifts to warm tones — and the seedheads of summer become winter's first form.

Brown is a color, too. Dried seedheads and grasses are a feature, not a flaw — they hold structure through winter, feed birds, and shelter overwintering native insects.
Winter · December – February

Standing form, then the first bulb.

The garden holds itself through winter on structure alone — and then the snowdrops emerge on warm days in January.

Seed heads and grasses provide food for birds and overwintering habitat for native bees, moths, and butterflies (more on the pollinator side here). Leaving them in place isn't laziness — it's ecology.
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