
The grass matrix in the heart of Oudolf Field at Hauser & Wirth, England – Design & picture credit: Piet Oudolf
It’s about setting aside our desire for control to instead work in partnership with nature. This is essentially the guiding principle behind the naturalistic garden, a plant-driven approach to landscape design that has been around in one form or another since Englishman William Robinson first published his first edition of The Wild Garden in 1870.
But now with signature projects like the High Line in New York City and Chicago’s Lurie Garden, a growing global movement in planting design has found a bolder, modernist expression of this ideal with a collective dream to re-wild our nature-deprived urban worlds.
It’s one thing to marvel at the High Line, with its ecstatic sweeps of perennials and grasses as envisioned by Dutch garden designer and plantsman Piet Oudolf, but for home gardeners, the question is, How can I bring something of this wild spirit back to my own urban garden reality?
I once wondered the very same thing. After years of experimenting in my own northern perennial garden and getting to know some of the plants and people leading the charge, I became seriously inspired to find a way.
Allow me to share some ideas to help guide you on the path less manicured.

The post-industrial High Line has revolutionized our concept of public green space – Drone image: Timothy Schenck

The grassy meadows of the High Line. Designed intentionally to feel wild. – Picture credit: Piet Oudolf

Fall splendors at Hummelo, the private garden of Piet and Anja Oudolf – Design & picture credit: Piet Oudolf
Inspired by nature. Attuned to ecology. Do try this at home.
The naturalistic ethos is about creating a multi-purpose garden with the amplitude to feed the soul and nurture local biodiversity. It seeks to minimize typical garden inputs like pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers, while recycling its outputs from rainwater to garden waste, all in the name of self-sustainability.
This approach to design can work in virtually any kind of garden context or style, whether the hardscape is formal, cottage or contemporary. In fact, juxtaposition is your friend. Or, as Mien Ruys, the late mother of modern Dutch garden design, put it: “Wild planting in a strong design.”

Pollinators love Alliums. Shown here Nectaroscordum siculum – Picture credit: Tony Spencer

Give stick insects a reason to stick around. Picture credit: Tony Spencer

Open Days at Hummelo: (L to R) Beth Chatto, Mien Ruys, Unidentified, Piet Oudolf
Scale up. Scale down.
A naturalistic style can be scaled up or down as needed, from the open expanse of a lawn-free front yard to a mere window box. Mind you, the smaller the scale, the more finely tuned the nuance and detail of plant selection and positioning become.
Ecologically speaking, the natural garden is adaptable to almost any kind of ecosystem; a core principle is to group plants together by common habitat, be it woodland, prairie, wetland or steppe. A smaller garden is more like a micro-habitat, where everything starts with the setting itself. The more you know about your existing site and its conditions (light, soil, pH, moisture, hardiness zone, etc.), the more successful your future design and planting decisions will be.

From the High Line to the high rise – Design and picture credit: Piet Oudolf
A new way of seeing
The current fascination with naturalistic style can be traced in part to the rise of the so-called New Perennial movement in planting design. This movement originated over 40 years ago in the Netherlands as an iconoclastic group of designers, plantsfolk, artists, and philosophers with Piet Oudolf emerging as its leading figure.
The New Perennial approach is about opening your mind’s eye to see plants for more than simply the beauty of their flowers. Philosophically, it’s about embracing change in the garden and the interplay of textures and foliage from birth to bloom and from decay to death. This quietly revolutionary aesthetic underpins a four-dimensional approach to design with the plantings composed like a living art form, designed to evolve in space and time.
In public plantings, what may appear to be spontaneous is, in fact, highly orchestrated, planned and considered as part of the designer’s vision. In your own garden, there are no such rules: Feel free to experiment. The joy of working with perennials and grasses is that once planted, you can always tweak, edit and revise your designs over time. We learn by looking. And in many ways, the best teacher is the garden itself.

Piet Oudolf at the Lurie – Photo credit: Tony Spencer

Designed to change in every season and cycle of life. Shown here at Hummelo – Picture credit: Piet Oudolf
Rooted in plant selection
The aesthetic of the New Perennial garden is rooted in plant selection with an eye to both ecology and design.
The visual emphasis is on structure and form rather than colour, because structure can persist over the entire growing season, while flower colour comes and goes. The preference is for perennials closer to the species, with a wilder character and a more proportionate leaf and stem to flower ratio than over-bred cultivars.
The aim is to select proven, long-lived, robust plants capable of performing strongly in various garden conditions. Extra marks are awarded for persistence in form and seed head, or, as Oudolf says, “Plants that die elegantly.” Indeed, a whole other colour palette comes into play in fall and winter with straw, brown, charcoal and rust.
Particular attention is also paid to how each plant grows from the roots on down—whether it clumps or runs, and how well it responds to stress and competition. Every detail of a given plant’s habit provides a clue into how well it plays with others and what ecological niches it can fill.
In his search for an expanded plant palette, Oudolf assembled and introduced a number of initially obscure perennials and grasses that fulfilled these criteria. Over the course of 30 years, he developed a signature perennial palette of plants that he could trust to behave as “good neighbours.”
The shape of things
For purposes of design, Oudolf encourages us to think of the herbaceous kingdom as a series of spires, globes, daisies, buttons, spikes, plumes and umbels, as well as the textural effects that various plants can create, from a solid screen of ornamental grasses to a transparent curtain of grasses, depending on the species and where they’re sited.
The goal is to free the mind to think in the abstract when combining plants and to aim for a variety of shapes and effects in the course of one planting area. It may also gently steer the gardener away from the temptation to plant one of this and one of that with no sense of connection.
As Roy Diblik, author of The Know Maintenance Perennial Garden reminds us: “One plant is just a single note; no matter how beautiful on its own, it needs other notes to form a melody. That’s where the real music can begin.”
Plants with purpose
The next part of the equation is to consider the role a given plant species might play in your garden ecosystem. What is its benefit to wildlife? Does the plant serve as larval host for any particular insect? Do its seed heads benefit foraging birds in winter? The list is long and deep.
These are all things to keep in mind but ultimately, it’s not just about the plants or their provenance. It’s about how you put them all together to create a diverse garden habitat capable of nurturing a wide diversity of creatures. And yes, that includes the gardener too.

At its most elemental, planting design is about composing with shape and texture – Picture credit: Piet Oudolf

Don’t forget the umbels to wild things up: Astrantia major – Photo credit: Tony Spencer

Making a statement with the feathery buttons of Sanguisorba ‘Red Thunder’ – Photo credit: Tony Spencer
Designing in layers
The naturalistic garden comes to life using the ecological principle of layering.
Most natural habitats are made up of a series of planting layers. For example, a typical woodland consists of at least three layers: the upper tree canopy, mid-shrub understorey and lower ground layer.
This key principle of multiple layers—where plants are grouped by common habitat in proportionate layers to create a dynamic plant community—is essential to the design process, as shown in the sectional diagram below from the indispensable book Planting in a Post-Wild World by Thomas Rainer and Claudia West.

Woodland layers in a Vermont forest – Photo credit: Tony Spencer

Layers in a Designed Plant Community: Source ‘Planting in a Post-Wild World’ by Thomas Rainer and Claudia West
In a typical home garden, there are generally four or five layers to consider when assembling a plant list and creating a naturalistic planting design:
- Structural layer: trees, woody shrubs, taller perennials and grasses
- Companion plant layer: mid-size theme plants
- Groundcover layer: (aka matrix layer) works like a living mulch to suppress weeds, retain moisture, and thereby eliminate the need to apply store-bought mulch to bare soil
- Vertical layer: vines and climbers to run up fences, shrubs, and trees
- Filler layer: short-lived plants and bulbs scattered throughout to add spontaneity and seasonal interest
Another way in which a naturalistic design is different from other planting styles is that instead of planting in monocultural blocks, perennials and grasses are freely intermingled in single and small groups to create natural-looking drifts and repeated patterns throughout the entire planting area. The idea is to let one grouping flow into and past another to give the feeling of spontaneity.
The layers are planted to knit closely together to cover any open ground, suppress weeds and support invertebrate life. The ideal is to create contrast with a mix of coarse and fine foliage in the layers. Even in a small garden, go for size and scale; too many small plants can read as fussy.

The layered approach brought depth to my first serious attempt at a naturalistic garden – Design & photo: Tony Spencer

Planting designer Adam Woodruff bring effusive flair to a sunny matrix. – Picture credit: Adam Woodruff
Ready. Set. Grow.
To naturalize an existing garden, you can start off slowly. Simply change up your maintenance regime to influence the look of your plantings. Leave seed heads to form instead of deadheading. Rather than cut everything back in the fall, let plants stand for the winter and enjoy their silhouettes. In every such decision, wildlife benefits from our not-doing.
Experiment with some wilder-style plant choices like umbellifers (e.g. Achillea, Astrantia, Eutrochium, Zizia) that speak to your aesthetic and suit your conditions. Introduce specimen grasses, a skirt of sedges or ferns into the heart of your plantings to create a wilder look. Edit existing plantings to create more random and less predictable patterns.
If you have a blank canvas, start by choosing a mood or theme for your new garden. That choice invariably influences all your other decisions, from the hardscape to the plants you select. Position your plantings for prime viewership, whether from inside your home looking out or from wherever you plan to spend time in the garden itself. You’re using plants to create a vibe, an atmosphere, and to invite the outside in.
On a smaller scale, the plantings can become parts of a stage set. Try to repeat theme plants and combinations to link one part to another. Pay special attention to how natural light moves through the garden space to illuminate the plantings.
Get out into the world and visit public gardens that follow a more naturalistic approach. Or just get lost in nature and find your muse there.
Have patience and give it time. When your home garden starts to appear as if it has grown all by itself, you’re definitely on the right (less manicured) path.

Archangelica atropurpurea: The essence of architectural at the Toronto Botanical Garden. – Photo credit: Tony Spencer

The smoky plumes of Geum triflorum – Photo credit: Tony Spencer

Rolling in the deep – Picture credit: Jaap de Vries
Originally published in Garden Making Magazine.
Resources:
Extremely Useful Books (updated 2024):
At Work: Piet Oudolf, Various contributing writers • Phaidon
Planting the Natural Garden, Piet Oudolf and Henk Gerritsen (ed. Nöel Kingsbury)
Essay on Gardening, Henk Gerritsen • A&NP
Planting: A New Perspective, Piet Oudolf and Dr. Nöel Kingsbury • Timber Press
Landscapes in Landscapes, Piet Oudolf and Nöel Kingsbury • Monacelli Press
Naturalistic Planting Design: The Essential Guide, Nigel Dunnett • filbert press
The Know Maintenance Perennial Garden, Roy Diblik • Timber Press
Planting in a Post-Wild World, Claudia West and Thomas Rainer • Timber Press
Garden Revolution, Larry Weaner and Thomas Christopher • Timber Press
Sowing Beauty, James Hitchmough • Timber Press
The Encyclopedia of Grasses for Livable Landscapes, Rick Darke • Timber Press
Dirr’s Hardy Trees and Shrubs, Michael Dirr • Timber Press
Gardens of the High Line: Elevating the Nature of Modern Landscapes , Piet Oudolf and Rick Darke, Timber Press
Gardening in a Changing World: Plants, People and the Climate Crisis, Darryl Moore • Pimpernel Press
Gardening with Prairie Plants, Sally Wasowski • University of Minnesota Press
The Gardener’s Guide to Prairie Plants, Neil Diboll and Hilary Cox • The University of Chicago Press
Insects and Gardens: In Pursuit of a Garden Ecology, Eric Grissell • Timber Press
The Well-Gardened Mind – The Restorative Power of Nature, Sue Stuart Smith • Scribner
What a fantastic rant article today thank you
You’re welcome, Di. Nice to be a guest in this space.
Tony-I applaud all you do to educate people about naturalistic planting. I would add one very thorough book to your excellent list–Wild: The Naturalistic Garden–written by Noel Kingsbury, with photographs by the gifted Claire Takacs. Also, GardenRant readers may want to check out the Gardenmasterclass YouTube Channel for Noel’s recent discussion on naturalistic planting vs. ecological planting.
Hi Jenny, Much thanks and yes, that is a sinful omission. Not by intention, I loved Wild and actually hosted an interview with Noel last year to discuss it. Good recommend on YouTube, I heard him deliver that same talk in Germany last August at the start of the Dynamic Vision symposium. Powerfully relevant, and he pulls no punches.
Excellent essay! Thank you!
Thanks Lisa for taking the time to take it in.
A very useful read for mid winter. This is so much more than a rant! It brings the parts of naturalistic design into focus, makes them useful without being simplistic. I’m a gardener with a visual art background and this writer binds the visual elements to the functional so beautifully. The quality of organic harmony is everywhere fom a crack in the sidewalk to a wild forest or prairie. Nature is constantly composing. (As well as composting). I wonder that it has taken so long to for appreciation of nature as a gardener to blossom as the latest gardening trend. I hope it goes wild. thanks for the excellent list of resources too.
Thanks Mary. Yes, not very rant-y but you’ve definitely caught my drift. While I’m heartened by the rising tide for this wilder modality of gardening, it’s in cultivating greater design awareness for how to compose that makes it sing. As a visual artist, you have a head start and endless material with which to play.
I just love this! As a gardener who must now restrict gardening to a narrow border where deer roam I love learning or re-learning the basics of making a garden that helps maintain all nature, not just mine. The reading list is inspiring!
I will start with your book!
Thanks!
Much appreciate, Chris. Experimentation is what it is all about and adapting these ideas to wherever you happen to garden.
Wow! I am a horticulture/environmental design student and I stumbled upon this essay doing some research for my senior project. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge & wisdom in this essay!
Glad to hear it, that’s just what I had in mind when I originally wrote the article. You’re welcome!
Tony, I posted a comment here today and its not posted -maybe it was too long have also posted on dutch dreams thanks maggie
What a pleasure to read about the structure of a natural garden (both above ground & below!) Thank you for the extensive reading list. I’d add the following book to your list, which I recently enjoyed reading: Rambunctious Garden: Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World by Emma Marris. Our appreciation of the role of gardens has certainly evolved — from simply bringing us pleasure — to also preserving & promoting environmental health (promoting plant & animal habitat and diversity).
Thanks Jean. I’m surprised at myself for leaving that out because I’m a major fan. I first read Rambunctious Garden in around 2014 and it had a massive impact on my understanding of ecology and conservation biology. Critically, it re-introduced the idea of novel ecosystems as a way to frame our concept of “nature” in a modern world where “wild” no longer exists. Therefore, it’s a “post-wild” world. She is a provocative speaker too with a host of stuff to check on YouTube. You might also check ‘The New Wild’ by Frank Pearce along these lines.