top of page

Garden Architecture

Field Notes by Stephen Coan

Great planting needs structure to succeed. Garden architecture is the quiet framework that clarifies movement, creates destinations, and holds the landscape together so the planting can take the lead. This note explains what garden architecture is, why it matters, and how it supports a garden that matures beautifully over time.

Stone path passing through a vine-covered moon gate.

Garden Architecture and Supporting Landscape Elements

At Stephen Coan Garden Design, garden architecture forms the intentional framework that allows a horticulturally significant garden to flourish. These elements do not compete with the planting. They elevate it.

Garden architecture can include terraces, steps, paths, thresholds, landings, edging, and subtle landforming. When it is done well, it feels inevitable, as if the property always had this logic.

What garden architecture does

Garden architecture quietly supports the entire experience of a landscape:

  • Clarifies movement so circulation feels effortless

  • Frames views and guides the eye without shouting for attention

  • Creates destinations and outdoor rooms that invite you to linger

  • Provides structure so planting can be lush without feeling chaotic

  • Improves function through grade transitions, drainage logic, and durable surfaces

  • Strengthens legibility so the landscape reads as cared for in every season

Why these elements are often built first

Using The Coan Method™, structural elements are typically established before major planting because they set the spatial rhythm the garden will grow into. When the framework is right, planting integrates naturally. Paths make sense. Thresholds feel clear. The garden reads as one coherent composition rather than separate parts installed at different times.

Materials and restraint

Materials are selected for authenticity, longevity, and the ability to sit quietly within living plant layers. The goal is not to show off the hardscape. The goal is to create a dependable backbone that disappears into the experience, allowing the planting to carry the emotion of the garden.

Where structure and softness meet

The best landscapes are not hardscape-forward or planting-only. They are composed.

Garden architecture is what allows a landscape to feel natural and refined at the same time. It holds the garden together, protects the planting, and welcomes you deeper into the property as the seasons change.

Next Step

If you want a landscape where planting and structure read as one composed whole, start with a brief application so I can understand your property, goals, and timing.

Stephen Coan Garden Design  
Nature Inspired Gardens & Landscapes

267.251.5855

info@coandesign.com

Garden & Landscape Design, Consulting,

& Installations, Residential, Commercial, Institutional,

& Public Gardens

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Houzz
BEST OF HOUZZ 2018 for service in garden and landscape design and installation
BEST OF HOUZZ 2025 for service in garden and landscape design and installation
BEST OF HOUZZ 2019 for service in garden and landscape design and installation
BEST OF HOUZZ 2020 for service in garden and landscape design and installation
BEST OF HOUZZ 2025 for service in garden and landscape design and installation
BEST OF HOUZZ 2026 for service in garden and landscape design and installation

Certified by Longwood Gardens in:

Landscape Design &

Ornamental Horticulture Levels 1, 2, & 3

NJHIC# 13VH08688500 

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Thanks for submitting!

 

All Photographs, Drawings, Articles, and Contents of this site

© 2026 Stephen Coan / All Rights Reserved 

 

Stephen Coan Garden Design provides high-end landscape design and garden installation services throughout Southern and Middle New Jersey, as well as the Philadelphia tri-state region. We frequently collaborate with residential clients across Collingswood, Haddonfield, Haddon Township, Haddon Heights, Moorestown, Cherry Hill, Medford, Voorhees, Marlton, Mount Laurel, Riverton, Cinnaminson, Princeton, Philadelphia, the Main Line including Gladwyne, Bryn Mawr, and Villanova, and the greater Delaware Valley.

Select civic, institutional, and public-facing garden spaces are also considered throughout South Jersey and the Philadelphia region.

A limited number of destination commissions are considered each year by invitation, including private gardens, estates, cultural landscapes, public-facing garden spaces, and specialty horticultural projects in North America and Europe.

bottom of page