

Terraced housing often provides for small gardens with a single entrance through the building.
The architecture itself imposes treating the garden as an additional room.
At the same time, the need for contact with nature and its diversity is enormous, the owners of the garden dreamed of a multi-species garden, full of nooks and curiosities for children.
The diversification of the green area was created by differences in the terrain, which on such a short section could only be leveled by a palisade with two steps.
The other side of the terrace, surrounded by a gently sloping flowerbed, allows to create an adventure path for a three-year-old explorer, which leads to vegetable boxes and a mud kitchen.
The pergola in the corner covers the sandbox or swimming pool in the summer.
Thus, two children have a large field to play in such a small area at different stages of development, and parents have a large, diverse terrace area.
A variety of fruit-bearing plants in varieties adapted to the size of the garden allow children to have contact with nature from an early age and be fully aware of where the fruit comes from.









