
< img src=" https://www.remodelista.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/moon-gate.jpg" alt= "" > Welcome to Meanwhile, on Gardenista, in which we have a look at the goings-on over on our sibling site.
In this week’s edition: Lately we’ve seen circles, openings, and apertures appearing in interiors … and now in the garden, too, where they bring a sense of motion and calm. Here, 3 examples:
Above: What Is a ‘Moon Gate’, and do you require one? Photograph by Carl Wright. (For more on this garden, see Required Reading: The Irish Garden.).< img style= "margin-bottom:16 px; max-width:100 %; height: car" width=" 733" height=" auto "src="
https://www.remodelista.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/estudio-ome-the-ruins-revisited-9-photo-maureen-m-evans-e1774456826928-733×978.jpg” alt=”Cooking areas of the Week Influenced Storage and SinkSide Extras by Uncommon Projects picture 1″ > Above: Circles on circles in a new garden in Mexico, made to look ancient. See more in’ Gardens That Can Conserve the World’: A New Book on Small Landscapes with Big Ideas.< img design="margin-bottom:16 px; max-width:100 %; height: auto" width="733" height="auto" loading="lazy" class="size-post-content wp-image-1559593" src="http://www.remodelista.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/muhly-grass-733x550.jpg" alt="pink muhly turf 105"/ > Above: The power of a curving course. Photograph courtesy of Shannon Currey/Izel Native Plants from It’s Time to Reassess Our Love of Miscanthus.
For spring inspiration and a lot more, head to Gardenista.