Long views and classic garden rooms in Brinitzer Garden: Capital Region Garden Bloggers Fling

July 03, 2017


Much as I love my contemporary-naturalistic garden, and enjoyed puttering in my flowery cottage garden before that, my next garden — whenever and wherever that turns out to be — is going to be more like this one: smaller, with formal garden rooms laid out along axis views, and planted mainly with evergreens for less seasonal maintenance.

This beautiful and classic garden belongs to Arlington, Virginia designer Scott Brinitzer, and we saw it on the second day of touring during the Capital Region Garden Bloggers Fling in late June. We entered the garden via this long gravel path, drawn in by a striking focal point: a potted purple cordyline in a dusty blue pot in front of a pumpkin-colored shed door.


You can see the same pot in this photo, pulling double duty now as a focal point viewed from a spacious stone patio off the back of the house. Framed by a low hedge of clipped boxwood, feathery clumping bamboo, and panels of gray lattice fencing, the pot works like a visual magnet, drawing the eye into the next space along the L-shaped gravel path that connects various garden rooms.


I might have mirrored the lattice panels for additional privacy, but leaving them open provides more air flow, which is a plus in a Southern garden.


I love the color choices, which give a contemporary edge to the classic design. (Compare with the door’s previous incarnation in blue, as seen in Scott’s portfolio pics on his website.)


Here’s the opposite view, looking away from the shed toward a small circular patio and a pair of white Adirondacks. This pathway is a double axis, with carefully considered views that pull your eye toward focal points in each direction — an effective design technique for directing the movement of people through a garden and making the most of a small space.


The circular patio acts as a visual pause at the end of the path…


…as well as a turning point for a pathway to the driveway.


The old garage still sits at the end of what was once a long driveway. Scott told us that he kept part of the driveway up by the street and converted the rest into a water-permeable gravel path and garden, helping to cut down on water runoff from his property. Yes, that makes it a water-saving garden!


Heading back to the stone patio, wire chairs take up very little space, visually, as they cluster around a lion’s-head wall fountain.


I love how the fountain is cloaked with moisture-loving moss and softened by a clematis vine. A yellow hosta echoes the yellow-themed container planting at left…


…filled with ‘Color Guard’ yucca, variegated Solomon’s seal, and (I think) ‘Moonbeam’ coreopsis.


Lion’s-head fountain and purple clematis


Other patio pots contain caramel-colored plants, for an interesting change of pace.


New Zealand sedges, I think


Enveloped by the garden, the house is shaded by lovely trees, which Scott planted in his own and his neighbors’ yards as part of a streetwide beautification effort. A swooping wall of concrete aggregate encloses the front garden and the front porch — the creation of the home’s former owner.


Built-in urns are planted with a variety of succulents.


Scott’s dog, a cute Norwich terrier named Kobe, hung out with us as we toured the garden and enjoyed the wine and snacks the owners generously provided.


He seems pretty happy living here, doesn’t he?

Up next: My visit to the Smithsonian Gardens and U.S. Botanic Garden on the National Mall. For a look back at the pollinator-friendly Casa Mariposa garden of Fling planner Tammy Schmitt, plus a winery and garden center visit, click here.

I welcome your comments; please scroll to the end of this post to leave one. If you’re reading this in a subscription email, click here to visit Digging and find the comment box at the end of each post.
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20 responses to “Long views and classic garden rooms in Brinitzer Garden: Capital Region Garden Bloggers Fling”

  1. ks says:

    Well I have to say I’m impressed by your virtually people-less photos of this garden. Even the wine table is empty ! You clearly had a strategy that worked.

    • Pam/Digging says:

      I can be quite sneaky, KS. 😉 I generally hang back to get photos after everyone has moved through, or else I rush ahead. And to find the wine table empty, I can only assume the bottles were empty — ha! —Pam

  2. We have almost identical photos of this garden. Except you have a picture of me! I really enjoyed this space, and your assessment of it.

  3. I quite agree with your statement about wanting a small simple yet rich garden. This garden fits the bill. I too am amazed that you get such good photos without people, especially in a small garden. Bravo.

  4. Susie says:

    Pam, I enjoyed seeing this garden again through your eyes. It’s a lovely space. So nice meeting you at the Fling this year. susie

  5. Denise Maher says:

    If the heat and humidity are as oppressive as I imagine, then this would be the garden I would have in Virginia too — no running out to stake toppling plants or deadhead mid summer. I’d focus on spring bulbs maybe, lilies for scent, some potted tropicals, and this coo, green, formal/minimalist design. Love this, Pam.

  6. Sherry says:

    I love your photography & commentary. Lovely gardens.

  7. Kris P says:

    I’m impressed at how you managed to get so many photos unobscured by people, Pam! And you even managed to catch Kobe when he wasn’t on the move too – kudos. Best wishes for a happy 4th!

    • Pam/Digging says:

      I think Kobe finally got tuckered out. I was amazed that he was so comfortable lying underfoot among a bunch of strangers’ feet. —Pam

  8. Peter/Outlaw says:

    So elegantly planned and planted. Love the door in blue with the clay pot as much as with the colors of door and pot reversed in the revised plan. Looks like the fling was, once again, a great time & I’m sorry to have missed it. Like you, I love my garden but often contemplate what it would be like to have a garden with lower maintenance and stunning lines of this one. Probably will only happen when they put me in a rest home.

    • Pam/Digging says:

      Ha! Nah, probably even then you’ll be out planting and loving it, Peter. 😉 It was a very good Fling, and I’m sorry you weren’t able to come, but hopefully Austin next year? —Pam

  9. I have a Pinterst file called Final Garden in case I have a chance to create one more garden. That is unlikely but I would take this garden in a minute. As for maintenance, we are planting box and other evergreen spheres (upcoming post) but the maintenance is more time consuming that we imagined. Is the house you show the one that goes with the garden or the neighboring house? Though I love the garden it somehow surprised me to think it goes with this house.

    • Pam/Digging says:

      Well, at least Final Garden doesn’t contain pics of a beautiful cemetery, haha! I look forward to your post about the evergreens; that’s my strategy as well.

      The yellow house shown here is indeed the garden owner’s house. That’s the street view of the front yard. Most of my pics were taken in the back and side yards. —Pam

  10. Dee Nash says:

    I loved how his garden was laid out. So methodical. I’m afraid my brain isn’t arranged so well though. Ha! I really enjoyed the talk also about how they were trying to save his tree from Dutch Elm disease. A good education talk.~~Dee

    • Pam/Digging says:

      I was interested in that too, although, as with any garden I visit, I really just want to stroll around on my own and look at everything — ha! —Pam