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Garden Design

Gabion design ideas

Catherine Stewart

Catherine Stewart

January 14, 2013

I’m in love with gabions. At once both industrial chic and quaintly folksy, there’s something about that combined texture of stone and the sheen of metal mesh that really appeals. The other reason is they’re so DIY, as I’ve discovered since our first foray into gabion building a couple of years ago.

Tall gabion wall at Ballast Point Park, Sydney

Tall gabion wall at Ballast Point Park, Sydney

Then I was lucky enough to have the wonderfully talented Steve Warner (Outhouse Designs) do a quick sketch of a new backyard design for me. It included some low, curved, dry stone retaining walls and an free-standing stone ‘echo’ wall a few metres away and on a similar curve to help define a pathway. I ummed and ahhed about it for a while – I loved the shape and texture of the walls but the cost of buying the dimension stone and getting a stone mason in to build them……

When I realised I could build them as gabion walls at a fraction of the cost, it got me thinking about all sorts of ways you could use gabions in garden design. If you have access to local fill material (which can be any rubbish stone as long as its dimensions are bigger than the mesh openings), they’re cheap as chips to build, as the cages or mesh will only cost a few hundred dollars.

Stone gabion design Lee Bailey Bella Botanics

Stone gabion design Lee Bailey Bella Botanics

Gardens that reflect their local natural landscape have a genuine sense of place. Using your local stone, whether that’s sandstone, basalt, slate or granite will make it feel like it fits in with its surroundings. The stone can be either rounded boulders and large pebbles or angular broken stone but if you don’t have access to stone, or it’s not appropriate, you can also reuse broken concrete, old pavers, bricks and tiles for a more industrial aesthetic (and it stops them ending up in landfill).

Gabion walls by Gabion1

Gabion walls by Earthworks Landscape Services, Ireland. National Garden Exhibition Centre, Kilquade, Co Wicklow

Whatever your fill material, the wall is very textured and dominating, saying very loudly ‘look at me’. Keep that in mind when choosing adjacent surfaces and plants, as smooth surfaces from large unit pavers, poured pavement, or lawn will look better than busy small unit pavers. Soft, weeping grasses or clipped plants are also a perfect counterbalance to the hardness of the stone.

While most gabion kits are rectangular, don’t let that limit your design ideas. You can also build a curved gabion wall, as I did. (You can read all about its design and construction HERE.)

Design Carl Pickens Ellerslie NZ 2009 Gabions filled with graywacke pebbles

Design Carl Pickens Ellerslie NZ 2009 Gabions filled with graywacke pebbles

Walls
If the walls are low, than it’s the top of the wall that matters most, so keep that in mind when you’re packing the rocks, and save the best and most interesting pieces until last. If you want to incorporate a seat, you can attach some outdoor blueboard to the top mesh panel and mortar pavers onto that, or add a backing piece underneath the top mesh panel onto which you can attach timber boards – or just add some thick seat cushions.

A wall top can also incorporate succulents or epiphytic plants like bromeliads that will grow in bark chips, which you can hold in small pockets of geotextile.

Gabion wall with succulents from gabionbaskets.net

Gabion wall with succulents from gabionbaskets.net

Or form the basis of a greenwall, as in the example below from Badec Bros Deco in Pretoria, SA

Gabion green wall be Badec Bros Deco, Pretoria, SA

Gabion green wall be Badec Bros Deco, Pretoria, SA

Design Steven Wells, Melbourne

Design Steven Wells, Melbourne

Screens and fences
Gabion screens and fences need the rigidity of a surrounding frame of either timber or heavier metal. At eye height, the fill material becomes more critical and potentially more decorative, so you could introduce some subtle colour variations with bands of differently coloured stones but again it’s the texture that’s the most important element.

Gabion cages with various fill materials by Natasha Carsberg

Gabion cages with various fill materials by Natasha Carsberg

While the screen can be opaque, why not incorporate some spyholes using old-style concrete breezeway blocks or a few terracotta pipes. By using smaller cages and finer mesh you can even create a sort of vertical mosaic of all sorts of objects, using shells and bleached driftwood for a beach look, brightly coloured plastic for retro kitsch, old wine bottles (ahh… remember the night we had that delicious Grange Hermitage……) or rusting metal objects for a steam-punk screen.

David Hocker of Hocker Design Group incorporated a gabion-style wall filled with blue slag glass in his ASLA 2010 Award winning garden, and installed internal lighting for an amazing ethereal glow.

Gabion wall with slag glass. Design David Hocker of Hocker Design Group. Photo Gisela Borghi ASLA 2010 winner

Gabion wall with slag glass. Design David Hocker of Hocker Design Group. Photo Gisela Borghi ASLA 2010 winner

Gabion wall with slag glass with internal lighting. Design David Hocker of Hocker Design Group. Photo Gisela Borghi ASLA 2010 winner

Gabion wall with slag glass with internal lighting. Design David Hocker of Hocker Design Group. Photo Gisela Borghi ASLA 2010 winner

Gabion fence by Goodman Fabrications

Gabion fence by Goodman Fabrications

This ingenious gate design and construction by Goodman Fabrications, Arizona, makes a gabion gate light enough to swing by incorporating a self-contained internal open section.

gabion grass divides

You could also use the gabion framework like a large vase to support dried willow, bamboo or reeds to form a light and lacy screen, or even just dried leaves and twigs like this screen at the De Young Museum.

De Young Museum Rainwater tank screen (photo Katherine Longhurst)

De Young Museum Rainwater tank screen (photo Katherine Longhurst)

The Cafe Ato in Seoul, South Korea, designed by BONO, has one of the most innovative gabion screens around. The heavy solid mesh and rocks are transformed into something airy and light by ‘floating’ rocks, suspended within open mesh cages. Brilliantly beautiful.

Cafe Ato Sinmunro in Seoul - Design by BONO Photo retaildesignblog.net

Cafe Ato Sinmunro in Seoul – Design by BONO Photo retaildesignblog.net

Gabion planters by Gabion1

Gabion planters

Containers
When they’re not retaining much, gabion cages can be as narrow as 20-30cm (8-12in), so you can use them to build a container for a small tree or large shrub. A geotextile fabric or weedmat behind the wall prevents potting mix from washing through. Roots won’t grow through the gabion wall as they are airpruned.

Gabion sculpture by Natalie Clark

Gabion sculpture by Natalie Clark

Sculpture
I love these squat pieces by sculptor Natalie Clark, based in Idaho, USA, and the way they lean over, seemingly past their centre of gravity, plus her tall gabion fountain which spills into an underground sump.

Once you have the ability to cut and join mesh, the design possibilities are endless.

Gabion fish sculpture Tasmania

Gabion fish sculpture Tasmania

Kielder Maze 2003 'The Minotaur' by Shona Kitchen and Nick Coombe Photo James Morris

Kielder Maze 2003 ‘The Minotaur’ by Shona Kitchen and Nick Coombe Photo James Morris

Or how about a gabion labyrinth, like this one called ‘The Minotaur’ at Keilder Castle in Northumberland, UK, designed by Shona Kitchen and Nick Coombe. Using 200m of 2m high basalt-filled walls, it has some of the darker feelings of the original Greek myths, where labyrinths were a place of slow death.

Gabion bench by Ore Containers, Utah

Gabion bench by Ore Containers, Utah

Furniture

Gabion furniture has a non-nonsense ‘I’m here to stay’ look about it. I’m not entirely sure I like it as I’d prefer to have something I can move about but if your outdoor furniture, say in a front garden, is vulnerable to theft, this is for you. Or it can be high quality sculpture like this sleek and fluid gabion chaise by Florida sculptor Celeste Roberge

Chaise gabion by Celeste Roberge

Chaise gabion by Celeste Roberge

Garden water feature by Gabion1

Garden water feature by Badec Bros Deco, Pretoria, SA

Water features and ponds

While dry stones are beautiful, many really come in to their own when glistening wet so a gabion fountain is a perfect way to achieve that in all weather. A submerged pump hidden in the bottom will also have its sound muffled by the surrounding rocks.

Gabion blade fountain by Gabion Schanskorven

Gabion blade fountain by Gabion Schanskorven Nederland

You can insert a blade spout into a gabion wall as in this example from Gabion Schanskorven or copper spouts, as used by the innovative Badec Bros Deco in Pretoria, SA. Use a lintel beam to build an archway water feature like the one by Ore Containers below. Gabion walls can also form the support for a pond liner.

On the dark side of the moon' garden Ellerslie 2009

Gabion water feature wall Badec Bros Deco, Pretoria, SA

Gabion water feature wall Badec Bros Deco, Pretoria, SA

Gabion fountain by Ore Containers, Utah

Gabion fountain by Ore Containers, Utah

And now you can read my brand new post on How to build a curved gabon wall

Update – just came across this very interesting gabion wall which has used old house bricks from the demolished house to make a small boundary retaining wall. Love the way they’ve been packed on the angle.

Old house bricks used as a gabion retaining wall filler. Photo Sandra Heggen

Old house bricks used as a gabion retaining wall filler. Photo Sandra Heggen

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Peter Nixon
11 years ago

Gabions … yes they are rather underutilized, especially in residential work Catherine but I do think Ballast Point near Mort Bay in Balmain is a stand out example of public works where the locals got on side to be part of a better outcome where they could definitely see the win for themselves in an exceptionally successful re-use of a previously industrial site…. I especially like the slat shade “pergolas” there and certainly people ARE there using it I notice .. The gabion containers …. very Santorini …. no ? The Succ Gabion an interesting integration with planting and I just can’t see why the occasional bunch of silver tufts through the step shoulder gabions wouldn’t bring pleasing relief to their sandstone filled contents. The curved wall also especially interesting and sometimes can use Mark Paul’s “new” gabion pillows in a similar way with the added appeal of epiphytic planting … thanks for another well researched feature :))

Julie Thomson
11 years ago

Aren’t these gabions fabulous? Love them…. inside and outside. What an ingenious means of holding stones together in a practical, sturdy and aesthetically pleasing way . And don’t stones and rocks change when they are stacked and clustered? Love the way design makes us rethink uses and looks of everyday items. What a glorious contrast to soft, feathery garden foliage, too.

Grahame Coote
Grahame Coote
10 years ago

Hi Catherine, I was just researching gabion ideas for a client and came across this article that I’d somehow missed. Thanks so much for the article and the great pics. I love gabions too and to see them used in so many different ways… Very inspiring.

Janet
Janet
10 years ago

Great site. Just wondered where I could purchase glass slag for a gabion wall similar to the hocking wall. Live in Melbourne Australia.

Thanks

Alison
Alison
11 years ago

Those pictures are really inspiring – I may eventually get the courage to give the seat a go. They look as though they would suit any garden style. Need to work out what I want to use as the filler and then really think that I will give it a try. Great pictures with so many different ideas.

AnitaS
10 years ago

Hi Catherine! Thanks for all the gabion ideas you shared! Gabion is one of the user-friendliest building solutions. I love them. I work with them.

sally scopel
sally scopel
10 years ago

Am really interested to see pictures of your curved gabion wall and any issues you encountered as want to embark on one this summer.

Perri Wain
Perri Wain
10 years ago

Love what you are doing with gabions! We’d love to do a curved one as a retaining wall, but are concerned that the damp soil behind might cause the metal to rust more quickly. We have about 1800 mm of rainfall up here near Murwillumbah and clay based soils. Do you have any suggestions about that? thanks, Perri

Bistro
10 years ago

I love that glow in the dark design ideas.

Peter Phillips
Peter Phillips
10 years ago

Hi Catherine I like the way that you have shown how such a simple thing as a box of stones can be developed in a variety of very creative ways.
I am putting together proposals for a natural swimming pool at our house which is in South West France, and have been wondering about using gabions to form the separation wall between the swimming zone and planting, or regeneration zones of the pool. The questions I have are, how would zinc or galfan coatings affect the water, which for planting reasons will be maintained around ph7. There will be no fish in the pool but there will obviously be people. The other option for protection of the gabion wire mesh is UPVC , as the gabions will permanently be under a minimum of 200mm of water I expect that the coating would not be affected by UV.
I have the idea that the rocks in the gabions could possibly be used to support some aquatic plants any suggestions you might have on suitable plants would be welcome.
I would also like to hear from anyone else who might have experience of the use of gabions in natural swimming pool construction, thanks Peter

Meg
Meg
10 years ago

Peter-
I am also investigating natural swimming pools and I have also thought of gabions as interior walls! I experimented this year with the Aquablox (RainXChange) being used here in the US as in-fill support for underground water storage tanks. However, instead of having the blocks be empty, I added some medium size stones. I had the thought that the stones would support algae and ammonia-eating bacteria. They worked beautifully in a small pond which had no pumps or electrically-supplied water movement.
I plan to move forward with an 8′ wide by 30′ long swimming pond next year. Here in Texas, it will not have the shallow bog area because for us, that turns into an algae-filled mess. I will simply put a double-thick wall of the blox inside my liner and grow water plants in containers resting on the blox. Hope this gives you some ideas of your own!

Faith L
Faith L
10 years ago

I would expect there would be some great applications for chicken coops/runs with these as well!

ashley milne
ashley milne
10 years ago

well done Catherine, best site i’ve seen on net, in 25yrs
Ash Milne

Marc
Marc
9 years ago

Great post!

Did you ever get a chance to finish the future blog post described above? – “You can also build a curved gabion wall, as I’m currently doing, and I’ll be blogging about its construction details here soon.”

I would really like to read it and learn.

Marc
Marc
9 years ago

Thank you! Looking forward to reading and exploring what I can apply here in Sedona, AZ.

Your articles are terrific.

elijah wachira
elijah wachira
9 years ago

My oh my! Great designs right there. Never thought gabions could be incorporated into so many structures.

Monique Lain
9 years ago

Hi Catherine.

Beautiful article and pics. Inspiring. Will be tackling my front and side walls soon. Having sleepless nights creating great ideas in my head. Also considering using gabions for entertainment area too – maybe too much / overkill?

Jennifer
Jennifer
9 years ago

Greetings, Catherine, I was so happy to find your terrific site and this post in particular. I have been interested in the great possibilities of gabions for a long time (since admiring at wall at an art museum where there were broken pieces of sculpture interspersed with the rocks in the front of the gabions). I finally have a project for which they would be a great fit (and give an old cracked patio a new life in a retaining wall). The design calls for a curved wall, so if you can post on your curved wall project, it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks again for such a great site.

Ed Swart
9 years ago

Anyone with curved gabion construction experience ?

Lori
Lori
8 years ago

Catherine, I have a question or 2 in regards to the curved gabion. I hired a person to build a curved decorative gabion wall in my backyard and it was going well until the end. I suspect he used wire that was too weak and the wall is all stretched out of shape. It is supported every 3 feet by wooden fence posts which actually turned out well. I am now low on cash to have it fixed but I was wondering if you know of any other wires/fencing that can be used. I’d love to send you pics of what has been done so far and what it is supposed to look like. I appreciate your feedback. Thanks, Lori

Discolizzy
Discolizzy
8 years ago

Hi Catherine love your ideas for a gabion wall. We have a large sloping garden towards the house currently terraced with crumbling brick built walls. We are looking for an alternative to replace these. Can you advise would we need to set the metal floor in concrete for it to stay where we put it? Discolizzy

Melca
Melca
7 years ago

Hi Ms. Catherine.
Any idea how to install gabion box underwater…Actually to be used as wave barrier (sea) and be installed from sea bed.
Thanks a lot

climber720
climber720
7 years ago

I am wondering if anyone knows what material was used to make the wall in the picture fourth from the top “Design by Carl Pickens…” I’m looking for something like that.

Thanks,
Josh

climber720
climber720
7 years ago

Thanks Catherine! I was actually talking about the mesh with the thick trim at the top. Was that part of the original mesh or was it welded on after the fact?

climber720
climber720
7 years ago

Thanks for the information Catherine!

Josh

Marcelo Rodriguez
Marcelo Rodriguez
6 years ago

Hi!
I try construct a wall in my house with a gabion, but in only one basket.
Between two columns I fixed a 2 meshes (2mm) and builded a “wall” of 3000x1800x150 mm, but while I was filled the structure, it’s increase the width too much…
Now I need pull out all stones and start again…
But, How is the best way?
I think make “prisms” (baskets) of 1 x 0.60 x 0.10 m for example and then assemble them, with 9 of them would have my wall of 3 x 1.80 x 0.10 are you think is it possibel? With that measure the wire will not give way and the stones will be hold? The wire I bought is 2mm… Any ideas are appreciated!
If you wish give me your mail I can send you my photos

Regards, Marcelo.

denver dieza
denver dieza
4 years ago

hi ma’am can i have details of the green wall gabions?

dirtgirl
dirtgirl
11 years ago

Thanks for sharing these beautiful designs. I too am a great lover of gabions and only last week was admiring the ones used on the big spiral circular walk at The Armoury at Newington. Would love some in my garden!

joel taylor
8 years ago

Hi Catherine if you love gabions you will love this Facebook/manchesterlandscapers

joel taylor
8 years ago

Thanks Catherine, we try and put gabions in every project have a look at http://www.manchesterlandscapers.co.uk you will love this even more thanks again Joel

zanettin stefano
8 years ago

Hello, I am Italian, and if possible I would like to present my production of steel gabions fully customizable. Thanks for the opportunity to let me know. http://www.zanettin.it

Angela L
Angela L
10 years ago

I’m am such a Gabion fan. I have just retained my entire terrace wall with gabions (the gardener wouldn’t do it as the concept was too alien). It use to be just a hill with a terrace on top. Now it looks fantastic! I want to start relaying the big concrete pavers all the way to the rim now and you wrote so helpfully, that you stuck Blueboard to the top mesh. can you be a bit more specific? I am trying to convince my gardener to do this, but over here this concept is quite unknown and he is looking at me as if I have gone completely bonkers. And unfortunately I can’t lift the big 50×50 concrete blocks myself 🙁
Thanks for all your help.