A patio corner that works harder than it looks.
At 73 inches tall and just 35 inches wide, this planter claims vertical space without demanding much floor area. The planting bed at the base gives roots 12 inches of depth and proper drainage — enough for tomatoes, cucumbers, flowering vines, and most vegetables that need room to develop properly rather than cramming into a shallow trough.
Above the bed, the trellis gives climbing plants somewhere to go. Over a season, what starts as a metal grid gradually fills in with green until the whole structure becomes part of the garden's texture rather than just its infrastructure.
The privacy screen that runs alongside handles whatever the space needs to conceal — an AC unit, a pool pump, an uninspiring fence line — while creating the sense of enclosure that makes a patio feel like a room rather than just an open surface.
Four casters sit underneath. Two lock. The galvanized frame handles rain, sun, and wind without intervention.
Pre-drilled, clearly documented assembly. Everything in the box. A garden structure that earns its place from the first season.