You may not have given too much thought to making your extension work with your garden, instead focussing on the extra space you will be gaining internally. But failing to ensure each does justice to the other is a missed opportunity.
While building an extension is a project primarily undertaken to expand a property and add rooms, it needs to be designed in a holistic way that means its design, both inside and out, make the very most of and enhance your external spaces.
“Adding an extension offers an excellent opportunity to reconsider how the property connects to the garden, enhancing the look and feel of a home as well as how you live within it,” says Neil Gaskin, director at Sketch Architects.
With that in mind, we reached out to the experts for their advice on the best ways to build an extension that sits in harmony with your garden.
Neil Gaskin
Neil is interested in how the fine detailing of design can really elevate a building, to create an exceptional home. He has specialised in residential architecture, working on projects ranging from one-off houses to large scale masterplans for housing developments of 1,000 units and more.
1. Aim for a seamless connection
Any house extension ideas should always be designed with the garden in mind, otherwise you risk them jarring with your surroundings. Ideally, you want the two elements to blend in a visually coherent way.
“The connection between a house and its garden goes beyond mere visual appeal. It is about creating a seamless transition between indoor and outdoor spaces, where the boundaries blur and the garden becomes an integral extension of the living area,” explains Simon Drayson, director at George & James Architects. “This relationship influences how a home feels, how it is used, and how it interacts with its natural surroundings.”
Neil Gaskin goes on to explain the best ways of creating this seamless effect.
“Creating a consistent floor level from the interior to the garden terrace can reduce a sense of difference,” says Neil. “This can be further enhanced by installing any opening glazing with a fully recessed bottom fixing base track to have a totally step free link. This blurs the sense of boundary between home and garden.”
To create a seamless connection between inside and out, bifold doors are a great choice, opening up entire walls(Image credit: Architect: Sketch Architects. Photography: Billy Bolton)
Simon Drayson
When architect Simon Drayson founded George & James Architects with Darren Leach they embodied the perfect combination of skills and interests, with Simon bringing more emotional intelligence and Darren more logic and analytical thinking. Simon has worked on his fair share of high-profile urban projects over the years, but upping sticks and going it alone definitely ranks as one of the best decisions of his life.
2. Align the garden with the house
Building an extension on a sloping site is not uncommon and, in many cases, the extension will sit lower or higher than the garden. In order to unite the two, therefore, this level change needs to be addressed. This might mean undertaking some excavation work.
George & James Architects designed the extension below carefully to enhance the connection between the inside and outside spaces, as Simon Drayson explains.
“A new terrace was carefully carved into the landscape, aligning it with the interior floor level,” he says.
“The garden terrace is carefully designed with dedicated outdoor kitchen, BBQ and preparation area, strategically positioned adjacent to the indoor kitchen so it can easily be used as an extension to this space in the warmer months.”
In some cases, excavation of the garden will be required in order to draw the extension and outside spaces together, as well as to allow plenty of natural light into the new addition(Image credit: Architect: George & James Architects. Photography: Tarry + Perry)
3. Tie flooring together as one
One of the most effective ways of bringing an extension and the garden together, both physically and visually, is to use the same flooring material for both.
“Selecting a single material for the flooring that extends from the inside out to the garden terrace can work to visually connect the two zones, making the areas feel like a cohesive whole,” explains Neil Gaskin.
If this is something you are keen to implement, when choosing patio doors, be sure to speak to your installer about how you can create a level threshold that remains watertight. This will add to the united appearance.
Matching flooring inside and out will mean your extension and garden work as one(Image credit: Architect: Sketch Architects. Photography: Chris Snook)
4. Match landscaping materials to your extension
By considering the materials you use within your extension design when it comes to your garden landscaping ideas, you will ensure the two complement one another perfectly.
“Carefully selecting the materials used in the construction brings the design of the house and gardens even closer together,” says Simon Drayson.
It might be that you use the same style or colour of bricks that have been used to clad your extension for your paving or any retaining walls, or mirror materials on garden rooms or structures.
For the project below, Simon Drayson explained that handmade Petersen Tegl bricks have been used throughout, ensuring the hardscaping in the garden feels like a natural extension of the home’s architecture.
Using the same distinctive bricks for the extension and garden walls means both elements work in unison (Image credit: Architect: George & James. Photography: Tarry + Perry)
5. Prioritise glazing placement
The role that your choice of windows and doors will play in the way that your extension and garden interact with one another cannot be overestimated.
“Glazing placement is a hugely important way to physically and visually connect a home to the garden,” says Neil Gaskin. “Strategically positioned, expansive openings invite the outdoors in.”
Both sliding and bifold doors are brilliant ways to physically open an extension out into the garden, but don’t discount the effect fixed glazing, such as picture windows, can have on fostering a connection too.
Both opening glazing, such as bifold doors, and fixed will help to connect indoor and outdoor spaces(Image credit: Design: Sketch Architects. Photography: Billy Bolton)
6. Consider remodelling existing spaces
Extensions always need to be designed with existing spaces in mind, benefitting the original ‘host’ building rather than causing it to play second fiddle to the new addition. This might mean that they are formulated in a way that pulls more light into previously dark spaces, or that they make the flow of movement between rooms freer.
However, the arrangement of the existing layout and its integration into the extension can also make or break how well it works with the garden.
Don’t be afraid to explore the opportunity for knocking down internal walls in order to improve the relationship between the interior and exterior spaces.
It is sometimes necessary to remove some internal walls or to rearrange internal walls to allow an extension to make the most of your garden(Image credit: Architect: George & James Architects. Photographer: Tarry + Perry)
FAQs
Should you design your extension or your garden first?
All too often, gardens and landscaping in general, get left as a bit of an afterthought, meaning that either the budget has been used up by extension costs or that the outdoor spaces don’t align with the new extension.
“Designing your garden at the same time ensures a seamless flow between your indoor and outdoor space,” advises Marc Lane, design director from Landscapia. “It does not commit you to build both at the same time, but it will help you see opportunities and give you the potential to create a beautiful extension of your home both inside and outside.”
Bear in mind that it isn’t just rear extension ideas that should be designed to work in harmony with your garden, side and even front extensions also need to enhance your outside spaces.
View the original article and our Inspiration here
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