Raised-Bed Kitchen Garden Design: Four-Garden Classic • Gardenary (2024)

Raised-Bed Kitchen Garden Design: Four-Garden Classic • Gardenary (2)

The Four-Garden Classic Is Our Favorite Raised Bed Garden Design

When I first started my kitchen garden design company, Rooted Garden, I thought that designing a kitchen garden meant placing a wooden box in the middle of someone's yard (and if they had lots of room, we'd do two boxes). It didn't take me long to discover that gardens, like homes, can actually come in many different styles, sizes, and layouts.

After designing hundreds of garden spaces, I've narrowed my favorite designs down to the top six that I've found work well in spaces both functionally and aesthetically. These six garden design layouts include: border gardens, twin gardens, garden trios, keyhole gardens, four-garden classics, and formal potagers.

The size and shape of the yard space that you have available will play a big factor in helping to determine which is the best raised bed garden layout for you. Today, we're going to focus on my favorite—the four-garden classic.

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This Garden Bed Layout Works Well in Large, Square Spaces

The four-garden classic requires a space that's square (or nearly square) in shape and at least 15 feet wide. Each of the raised beds in this garden layout are the same size, typically 4 feet, 6 feet, or 8 feet long and 2 to 4 feet wide. We often design raised beds to be rectangular for this classic layout, but we've also had spaces where we felt squares worked best.

(Learn more about the best length, width, and height for raised beds in our complete guide to raised garden beds.)

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We've been able to squeeze this design in well-lit side yards before, so don't think you have to have a huge, flat backyard to make this layout work.

The Best Raised Garden Bed Layout Ideas Appeal to Our Love of Symmetry

There's a reason this layout is tried and true—a classic in the garden design world. The symmetry between the two sides of the garden creates balance, harmony, and order. Aesthetically speaking, four gardens are what I think of as kitchen garden design perfection.

It's easy to create this symmetry by arranging the four raised beds in a grid-style with designated pathways in between. (Learn more about garden pathways.)

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Four Raised Garden Beds Give You Lots of Flexibility When Growing Vegetables

Functionally speaking, four raised beds allow you to grow lots of delicious leafy greens, herbs, root crops, and fruiting plants. You can separate crops and plant methodically (you can even practice easy crop rotation if you're into that). You can have the two halves mirror each other across the middle pathway, or you can have each of the four beds planted the same.

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This Garden Bed Design Is Like an Outdoor Room

Thanks to the four raised beds acting like four walls, the feeling you have when you're standing inside this type of garden is like being in your own magical little oasis. Imagine being able to escape the stressors of life for a bit in your own backyard and snip some herbs for dinner. I have a feeling that a four-garden classic kitchen garden would quickly become your favorite "room" in your home.

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Keep these tips in mind when you're designing your own kitchen garden space.

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Remember Accessibility

Raised beds in this raised-bed garden layout are typically accessible from multiple sides. If you can tend each bed from all sides, you could go as wide as four to five feet with each raised bed. Anything beyond five feet, however, would make it difficult to tend and harvest from plants in the middle of the bed.

If you can only tend from one side (say, for example, one side of your four-garden classic design would need to back up against a fence or wall), I’d recommend staying under two and a half feet, which is probably about as far as your arm can reach.

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When we designed a four-garden classic for our fantastic Rooted Garden client Dawn, we chose to install 3 foot-wide raised beds and increase the ease of moving through the space by laying black star gravel throughout the entire garden area. We added pavers along the central walkway to make stepping along the garden even more comfortable.

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Pair These Four Raised Beds with Garden Trellises

Garden design means using more than just the horizontal space available in your yard. Height is incredibly important too, not just for adding vertical interest but also for maximizing your growing space. With that in mind, each of the four beds in this design can have their own obelisk trellis, or you can connect two raised beds across the center walkway with a pair of arch trellises.

My favorite is to use arch trellises as a sort of grand entrance into the kitchen garden space. Few things are more beautiful or more inviting than an arch trellis covered in tomato vines or another climbing plant. (Explore ourcomplete listof what to grow up garden trellises.)

Dawn's garden features two Nicole trellises, which we're working on selling as easy-to-assemble kits in the Gardenary shop soon!

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Shop Gardenary's Arch Trellises

Don't Overextend Your Garden Space

Dawn is fortunate to have a beautiful and quite large backyard, but she wanted to preserve plenty of lawn for other outdoor activities. You don't have to fill your entire outdoor space with a kitchen garden. Also, keep in mind that the larger you build your garden, the more time you'll need to spend tending the plants growing there.

Dawn has added some extra growing space with pots and an extra tall raised bed in the back of the garden (I call it a bonus bed). Pots or small containers are ideal for growing plants like mint that spread and might take over a garden bed.

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Let Gardenary Help with Your Garden Design

Think of all the good stuff you could harvest from four raised beds in your own backyard! If designing your own garden feels daunting, we've got lots of resources here at Gardenary to help you create a space where you can grow and flourish, including my book, Kitchen Garden Revival, and our online kitchen garden design course, Kitchen Garden Academy.

Thanks for helping us bring back the kitchen garden, whether you're gardening from four small pots or four large raised beds!

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Raised-Bed Kitchen Garden Design: Four-Garden Classic • Gardenary (2024)

FAQs

How many pepper plants are in a 4x8 raised bed? ›

Based on our research, it is recommended to plant 2-3 pepper plants per square foot in a raised bed, which means a 4x8 raised bed can accommodate around 64-96 pepper plants.

How many vegetables can you plant in a 4x4 raised bed? ›

A 4ft. x 4ft. raised garden bed gives you 16 square feet of growing space (more if you add some trellises for vertical space). That means you can grow around 10 to 11 indeterminate, or vining, tomato plants in one raised bed—if you really love cherry tomatoes, that is.

What is the best layout for a vegetable garden? ›

As a general rule, put tall veggies toward the back of the bed, mid-sized ones in the middle, and smaller plants in the front or as a border. Consider adding pollinator plants to attract beneficial insects that can not only help you get a better harvest, but will also prey on garden pests.

How far apart should I plant cucumbers in a raised bed? ›

Space cucumbers 36 to 60 inches apart (12 inches apart for trellised plants) in an area with abundant sun and fertile, well-drained soil with a pH of 6.0 to 6.8. Improve native soil by mixing in several inches of aged compost or other rich organic matter. Cucumbers will grow quickly with little care.

How far apart should I plant tomatoes in a raised bed? ›

Plant Tomatoes

Plant them at 18- to 24-inch spacing. Don't worry about letting the plants lean to one side; in a few days, they straighten up on their own. Water tomatoes at planting and regularly while growing to avoid blossom-end rot, which is caused when the soil is allowed to dry out.

How many cucumber plants are in a 4x8 raised bed? ›

Using square foot gardening, you can comfortably grow two cucumber plants per square foot. Another great plant for square foot gardening is the cucumber. A healthy square foot gardening cucumber plant has a yield of approximately 5 pounds, and can also be grown vertically with support from a trellis.

Should tomatoes and peppers be planted together? ›

Tomatoes. Although it's usually recommended to not plant tomatoes and peppers right after each other in the same bed every year, they can be grown together in the same garden bed (and then rotated to another bed next season).

What is best to plant in a raised garden bed? ›

Raised beds work best when you fill them with plants that need the same amount of water to grow. If you try pairing a thirsty tomato with a dry soil-loving agave, for example, one of them will suffer. Moisture-loving plants that do well in raised garden beds include cardinal flowers, sedges, and monkshood.

How far apart should I plant vegetables in a raised bed? ›

The 4-inch spacing is for bush beans and spinach. A 6-inch spacing is needed for Swiss chard, leaf lettuce and parsley. A whole 12-inch square is required for each broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, corn, eggplant, muskmelon and pepper plant.

Can I plant tomatoes and cucumbers together? ›

Tomatoes and cucumbers can be grown together successfully, and there are actually some benefits to planting them together. Both plants have similar growing needs when it comes to sunlight, soil conditions, and watering. And if space is at a premium, interplanting the two will allow you to get more out of your garden.

What 3 vegetables grow well together? ›

The crops of corn, beans, and squash are known as the Three Sisters. For centuries these three crops have been the center of Native American agriculture and culinary traditions. It is for good reason as these three crops complement each other in the garden as well as nutritionally.

How to fill a raised garden bed for vegetables? ›

Bagged raised bed potting mix is commonly used in small raised beds, but you can purchase it in bulk from local landscape companies. Another option is to make your own potting mix by blending equal parts of topsoil, compost, and sand to create a quality mix that's appropriate for most vegetables, herbs, and flowers.

How far apart to plant vegetables in a raised bed? ›

The 4-inch spacing is for bush beans and spinach. A 6-inch spacing is needed for Swiss chard, leaf lettuce and parsley. A whole 12-inch square is required for each broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, corn, eggplant, muskmelon and pepper plant.

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