{"id":549003,"date":"2025-06-16T15:41:34","date_gmt":"2025-06-16T19:41:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.finehomebuilding.com\/?p=549003"},"modified":"2025-06-16T15:44:29","modified_gmt":"2025-06-16T19:44:29","slug":"designing-the-perfect-garden-gate","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.finehomebuilding.com\/2025\/06\/16\/designing-the-perfect-garden-gate","title":{"rendered":"Designing the Perfect Garden Gate"},"content":{"rendered":"
Tucked into a fence, an arbor, a hedge, or a wall, the gate beckons us toward the entry or into garden rooms beyond. It may be purely decorative, or a discreet property marker\u2014or it might provide privacy and even security. Garden gate designs changed with the era and from region to region. Fences and gates have a vast historical architectural vocabulary, so they are best designed starting with function. Then you can consider the material to be used, the period and style to be evoked, and the particulars of installation given climate and position in the garden. Whether in wood or metal, the gate should complement the house.<\/p>\n
Does the gate stand alone\u2014a mere invitation in the landscape or at an arbor\u2014or is it a hinged portion of the fence? Is it meant to obscure the view or invite the eye? Is it low, or as high as a door, or designed to be locked and impenetrable? The purpose of the gate suggests its dimensions, materials, and style. Most garden gates, though, are decorative, their only purpose to welcome or to ornament.<\/p>\n
Even so, choosing a style may seem daunting. It\u2019s obvious that chain link doesn\u2019t belong in a cottage garden and rail-and-style horse fencing would look odd in a formal garden. Beyond that, so many choices are to be made, from material to size, from degree of formality to finish.<\/p>\n A low house, whether an early New England gambrel or a West Coast bungalow, looks good with a low wooden fence. A brick Tudor Revival does well with a metal gate between brick piers. Study the neighborhood, museum houses, and books on historic architecture to get a feel for what fences and gates were popular for various house styles and era.<\/p>\n In many periods and most of the country, a wooden gate is the traditional choice. Wood gates were used in Colonial Williamsburg, in front of Federal houses in New England, in rural and agrarian areas, in suburbs nationwide and in the desert Southwest. Adaptable for almost any size or style, wood gates are more affordable than other options, easier to repair, and attractive as they age. Depending on the design, wooden fences and gates can provide extra privacy and even a barrier to noise. Wood may require more maintenance than other options, such as regular staining or painting and replacement of parts that begin to rot.<\/p>\n Various types and styles of metal gates are traditional. Think of the fanciful and famously ornate iron fences and gates of New Orleans, the finial-tipped gates in Victorian city neighborhoods, and the artful castings in bronze or iron for gates created for estates. Wrought iron is malleable enough to form into scrolls and even ornaments. Cast iron is brittle but good in compression, and rusts more slowly than wrought iron; it must be kept painted. Today\u2019s metal gates are available in wrought iron, steel, bronze, and aluminum, each having its advantages. Metal gates will last for decades and may be the right choice if locking and security is an issue. Metal fences and gates should be professionally installed.<\/p>\n Larger gates, especially, often are attached to posts or piers of a different material. For example, a wooden gate may be let into a stone wall; a metal gate may attach to brick piers. A gate might be just one element of a structural assemblage that includes walls or screens, a roof, or seating. In other words, the gate may be the whole point of the design, not just an entry. Some gates, though, open through a \u201cliving fence\u201d of plant material, be that trees or a hedge. These are invitations or a focal point.<\/p>\n
Wooden Gates<\/h2>\n
Metal Gates<\/h2>\n
The Frame: A Fence or Pier<\/h2>\n