October 29, 2010

Create the Atmosphere with a Japanese Pergola

The Japanese have used pergolas in their landscaping designs for centuries. If you need to design a Japanese-style garden in your yard, you will desire to include some kind of covered walkway or pavillion. Pergolas are arbors with cross-beams across the top which are commonly used to make formal entrances to gardens or to provide a covered area for relaxing and talking. Although the roofs of these structures are not water tight, you can grow vines over them to provide for a shady retreat. While the ancient Japanese built pergolas of stone, modern tastes have changed to wooden structures which are more affordable to build. As well as models made of wood, arbors are also available that are fashioned from iron, vinyl, and fiberglass.

Japanese pergolas are knock-offs of the original pagodas which were built to provide housing for the ashes of Buddha. Their design often includes straight crosspieces with scrolled ends. Through the centuries, the structures lost their non secular connotations, especially when the designs caught on in the western world where Buddhism is seldom practiced. Although these classic bowers went out of favour during periods of the 18th and 19th centuries when trendy gardens went through a natural trend, they have come back into style in the 21st century in a big fashion.

One of the cool things about today's pergolas is that most of them are available as kits that house owners can easily assemble without professional help. These kits can either be stock models, or you can find companies that will custom-build your design at their factory and then deliver it to your home for installation. Some websites offer tools so that you can learn about the different elements that are used to design the perfect arbor to fit your lawn, deck, or other application.

To give your pergola a more Oriental flare, you might need to consider adding Japanese lanterns for soft light and tatami floor mats. You also might like to add to your pergola building plans by enclosing part of the pergola with Shoji sliding doors and Japanese screens. A pergola will add architectural interest to your yard or patio, and adding plants that are typically found in a Japanese garden,eg bamboo, azaleas, moss, and carefully-pruned pine trees, can give your garden a very Oriental flare.

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