Sehr beeindruckend. Ist das realistisch? Wie hoch würden Sie die Kosten dafür schätzen, abzüglich des Arbeitsaufwands (alles selbst machen)? Ich müsste die Abflüsse berücksichtigen und natürlich wird das Tor immer noch da sein.

Von: Complex_Bother832

Share.

38 Comments

  1. How much sun does your yard get? Plants like the olive trees, and the pelargoniums shown in the AI images, and other Mediterranean plants in general often prefer full sun to only partial shade. Back yards like these are often in full shade however.

  2. The tile will make a massive difference but I think the AI is being overly generous with space on the right hand side

  3. HundredHander on

    Sun is your problem. Looking at your walls there is no way that garden is viable with those plants. You could maybe find shade tolerant plants with a similar vibe.

  4. Adventurous_Jump8897 on

    I would think about what’s realistic and what you want to spend. The main problem I have with the AI garden plans is they don’t account for light / aspect which makes a huge difference to what will grow where, and where you’d site things like a bench.

    Walls – putting brick walls in is maybe not the one. Painting the fences white and scrubbing / painting the concrete might be a good start? Trellis with something reasonably fast growing on it will help soften like on pic 3.

    Gate and pergola – maybe a good sized arbour in front of it or decent sized trees either side. Olive trees usually aren’t cheap unless you get them reduced but they are stupidly hardy.

    Decor – you can spend what you want but garden mirrors might be a start (£50-150) and some decent concrete or stone ornaments?

    Hard to guess costs – tiles and grout would likely be about £500-1000 if you did it yourself, maybe £300 in timber and fixings for the pergola if you shop around, and £400 to sky’s the limit for plants and pots?

  5. JessRushie on

    Also do not put a raised bed against wooden fencing or it will rot!

    You can definitely take inspiration from this but I would use real life inspiration over AI garbage any day. Garden mags, Pinterest, real life gardens online etc.

    Give your garden a thorough clean and white wash, terracotta tiles, and figure out the light. Where do you get light over the days and how much. Then start to consider plants. You could definitely have fun with climbers on a trellis.

  6. Dry_Researcher7744 on

    It looks great, but it’s significantly expanded your plot into space which you don’t have in reality. So, take it with a slab of salt.

  7. You’re building walls and annexing your neighbours land! Will be worth it

  8. 7hyenasinatrenchcoat on

    Very Roman to just decide to claim some of your neighbour’s land

  9. The arch way over the back gate is hilarious.

    My biggest concern with this (and the existing) would be adequate drainage and lack of sun.

    I think keeping it looking fresh and white not green and streaky will be a yearly battle.

  10. Outrageous_Ad_4949 on

    There’s a drain in the middle of your Roman med garden.. AI doesn’t seem to care about that.

    Imho it’s not worth the time and money to resurface the patio with tiles and mosaic unless you’ve got enough space there to put some garden furniture. Better to just focus on gardening as a hobby. Keep the floor clean, fix any cracks, maybe even lay out some artificial grass if you’re done with everything else.

  11. amcheesegoblin on

    Could probably work out width with the tiles on the ai pic. They’re 3×3 tiles aren’t they? Plus grout and then you can see if it’s feasible?

  12. That’s a really cool concept! An AI-designed Roman garden could have some fascinatingly authentic (and maybe chaotic) plant choices.

  13. Queasy-Meringue-7965 on

    If money is tight you could think about scrubbing the concrete and painting/stencilling it?

  14. OldMotherGrumble on

    I’m easily tricked…I thought the third photo was the finished reality.

  15. michaelinman11 on

    It’s not the most Roman but you could easily work with fern trees, ferns and ornamental grasses as planting with the shaded walled areas that would look just as impressive with a Med decor if your stuck with the planting side of it. Also instead of olive trees which are really expensive rosemary and woody herbs work well in sunny spots where then you get the bonus of snipping bits off for the kitchen 😊

  16. WeDoItForFunUK on

    Looks good for a scrape book idea. You said it’s a sub trap, great.

    Would it get green and mouldy during the winter?

  17. Ooooh what AI did this? I need ideas for a front garden that has an annoying level difference.
    *

  18. Arrrgh I thought the 3rd pic was the actual outcome of your transformation! Silly me.

  19. flamboyantpuree on

    I saw another post where they used AI to visualise garden changes. What AI are you using and with what prompt?

  20. Definitely doable – tiled however will be slippery and need yearly power spray, you’ll need good drainage, fountain is a waste of money in my view, seating would be better, need to think carefully about party walls you can’t just raise the ground level against a party wall, you could perhaps build some similar seating out of wood that sits against part wall, you’ll need different plants in pots things with some shade and cold tolerance, the grapevine pergola would work, not sure I’d do the silly Roman architectural items.

  21. seemedpointless on

    Jesus man this is so dumb. The space isn’t even the same size. AI has broken people’s brains.

  22. North_Fortune_4851 on

    Please ..tell me what software/app../thing you used for this?

  23. AverageWorkingPerson on

    What AI app have you used for this? I’m a noob when talking about AI but I’d like to try the same on my garden

  24. minecraftmedic on

    Going to be slippery as fuck, you probably don’t get lots of light back there given all the algae and moss on the ground, so grape vines might not grow as well.

    Also the well / planter and fountain will really get in the way!

  25. justbiteme2k on

    Careful, it’s made your path about 2ft wider than it really is.

    Just look where the open door is in the real picture, then the subsequent two others.

Leave A Reply