ARCHITECTURAL plants have flowers or foliage with strong, sharp, or dramatic shapes. Garden designers use them to add interest and theatrical structure; their bold forms act as foils for softer plants, as well as creating visual accents that draw the eye and make a garden more captivating. And architectural perennials can be planted now.
Some are dramatic giants that live at the back of the border. For instance, the 2m-tall Eryngium pandanifolium ‘Physic Purple’, which has sprays of dark-red cone flowers above a mass of spear-like foliage. And the waterside giant Gunnera manicata, which grows into a mound of dinosaur-sized leaves every single year.
Other architectural perennials are more compact. The yellow candles of Kniphofia ‘Bees’ Lemon’ and the sword leaves of Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ grow to 39in (1m) tall, while the immense firework heads of Allium schubertii and the heartshaped leaves of Hosta ‘Francee’ only reach 60cm. And tiny houseleeks (Sempervivum) are some of the most architectural plants in the garden.
Positioning and perspective
But size doesn’t matter if plants don’t block the view. Digitalis parviflora ‘Milk Chocolate’, for instance, forms slender 24in (60cm) spikes of amber-fawn flowers, and looks great near the front of the border because the plants behind can be seen. Likewise, the drumsticks of Allium sphaerocephalon act as accents that draw the eye and allow a view of the plants beyond, in turn creating layers.
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