Embracing the Slope

A garden designer specializing in hillside gardens showcases his own creation

UR-RP1-220412-5_15_700px

The name says it all: Peter Berg, a renowned garden designer, has built his practice around one specialty—designing hillside gardens. So it's hardly surprising that his own garden sits on a slope too, offering endless terrain for experimenting with new concepts. Set on a former vineyard site in Westum, the landscape spans seven distinct levels and rises 40 metres from Wachtelweg to the highest point above the vineyard cottage. This expansive terrain is structured through carefully placed stonework—boulders, walls, and block steps that not only anchor the slope but create a navigable path through the elevation changes. "Terraced slopes represent some of the most distinctive features of cultural landscapes," Peter Berg explains. "The way they interact with existing rock formations has always captivated me." Growing up in the Ahr Valley shaped his deep appreciation for this interplay.

Throughout the garden, artfully stacked boulders meet ingeniously integrated stairways and striking dry stone walls—a craft Berg clearly treasures. Traditional masonry skills shine in the living terraces, complete with a small vineyard and cottage. Here, delicate ornamental grasses soften the solid stone structures, creating an unexpectedly refined aesthetic. Contrasts define the designer's approach. Columnar oaks soar skyward on one side while bushy plantings dominate another. Formal terraces alternate with loose stone arrangements, and the third level unveils another striking contrast: a carpet of wirebush that drapes across the stonework like moss. The fourth level opens to a vegetable garden, framed by clipped hedges and yew pyramids and sheltered beneath an apple tree's generous canopy. At the garden's heart stands an impressive waterfall—several tonnes of basalt stacked to dramatic effect. Throughout the entire composition, every crevice serves a purpose, hosting varied plantings that create a unified vision where natural stone, vegetation, and water blend into a nature-inspired whole.

www.gartenlandschaft.com

Photography Credits:

Ulrike Romeis

(Published in CUBE Cologne Bonn 01|23)

Nothing found.

Light-Filled Workspace

High-Performance Office Building in Maxvorstadt

A Successful Transformation

The renovation of a former weekend home captivates the client

Individuality Within a System

Primary school merges planning and manufacturing efficiency with contemporary design

Nothing found.

DAM_Boehm100_Neviges_Pilgrimage_of_Nuns_from_the_Ropp_15_700px

A Master of Architectural Form

Architect Gottfried Böhm Turns 100

Compact and flowing

A Cologne apartment building that transforms a tight site into generous living space

014_190926_HouseD6_AretzDuerr_ResidentialBuilding_Oberberg_Germany_15_700pixel

Sustainability Made Simple

Steel, glass, and wood define a transparent family residence

Heerstr_2022_10_15_700pixel

Past and present in conversation

Two townhouses in Bonn's Nordstadt district undergo sensitive historic restoration

Desirable Living Spaces

New Residential Complex with Integrated Childcare Center in Frechen

VEF_1073_f_42_700pixel

Restraint and Openness

A landmark villa stripped to its essence and redesigned with uncompromising clarity.

Benz_Print-4_15_700pixels_W0OuWwoWMr6u0

Renovation as Remembrance

Expanding a family home with respectful modernization that honors its heritage

6SW_Lakeside Quarter_View from Water_Copyright GEBAG_15_700px

Promises Delivered

"6-Seen-Wedau" is redefining the future of urban living