Sustainable Plant Selection
How to read hardiness zones, soil and exposure before buying, with species that cope with regional German conditions.
Northgrove House collects working notes on resilient plant selection, hedge layout and the small green zones that sit between a German house and its street. The focus is what holds up through cold winters, dry summers and clay-heavy soils.
Each topic is written as a standalone reference, with examples drawn from typical German residential plots rather than show gardens.
How to read hardiness zones, soil and exposure before buying, with species that cope with regional German conditions.
Spacing, sight lines and species choice for boundary and dividing hedges, including the boundary-distance rules common in Germany.
Turning the strip between wall and pavement into a low-maintenance planted zone that manages rain and surface heat.
The Vorgarten — the planted strip between the building line and the street — is a familiar feature of German residential streets. Even a few square metres can intercept rainfall, soften summer heat against a façade and provide forage for insects.
Note sun and shade through the day, how water sits after rain, and whether the soil is sandy, loamy or heavy clay.
Choose species suited to the exposure and soil instead of forcing a fixed look — the planting list follows the site, not the other way round.
Place hedges, paths and any larger shrubs first; these define the lines that everything else fills in around.
Plant in cooler months where possible, water in well, and cover open soil with mulch to hold moisture and limit weeds.
Use the form for editorial questions or corrections. It runs entirely in your browser for this static site and does not transmit data anywhere.
Northgrove House
Hamburg, Germany
Published references are linked within each article and in the site footer.