Brutalist
Explore AI-generated Brutalist garden designs. Upload your room photo and get photorealistic results in under 30 seconds.
Redesign my garden in BrutalistWhy This Pairing Works
A garden is primarily about outdoor living, planting, and landscaping. Brutalist brings exposed poured concrete to this space, creating an environment that feels natural, peaceful, and grounding. The style's emphasis on heavy geometric forms pairs naturally with the garden's need for subtle pathway and accent lighting lighting. When it comes to durability, Brutalist works here because garden surfaces need extreme — fully exposed to weather, soil, and organic growth resistance, and the style's material palette accommodates that.
Design Elements
Choose a garden bench that embodies Brutalist — exposed poured concrete. In a garden, this is the piece that sets the tone for everything else.
Add pathway materials and raised beds that reinforce the Brutalist aesthetic. Look for pieces with heavy geometric forms to build visual cohesion.
Apply the Brutalist palette to your garden using the 60-30-10 rule: dominant colour on walls and large surfaces, secondary on upholstery and textiles, accent on decorative objects and hardware.
Garden lighting should be subtle pathway and accent lighting. For Brutalist, choose fixtures with monochrome & industrial materials to reinforce the aesthetic.
Since your garden needs extreme — fully exposed to weather, soil, and organic growth durability, select materials that align with Brutalist's palette — heavy geometric forms — while meeting the practical demands of the space.
Complete your Brutalist garden with accessories that solve designing for year-round interest across seasons. Consider water feature and decorative elements that add personality without compromising the style's core principles.
Colour Palette
The signature palette for Brutalist spaces. Use the 60-30-10 rule: dominant colour on walls and large surfaces, secondary on furniture, accent on details.
Raw Concrete
#808080
Dark Aggregate
#2C2C2C
Steel
#4A4A4A
Cement
#B0B0B0
Common Questions
A brutalist garden typically uses heavy geometric forms. Apply your chosen palette with the 60-30-10 rule: 60% dominant neutral on walls, 30% secondary shade on furniture and textiles, and 10% accent colour on decorative details. This creates a cohesive brutalist feel while ensuring the space remains natural, peaceful, and grounding.
Start with the core principles of Brutalist — exposed poured concrete — and adapt them to your garden's specific needs. Since a garden is primarily used for outdoor living, planting, and landscaping, focus on blending hardscape and softscape cohesively. Layer in lighting that is subtle pathway and accent lighting to set the right mood.
Key pieces for a brutalist garden include garden bench, pathway materials, raised beds. Look for furniture that features exposed poured concrete — the defining characteristic of the style. Since garden furniture needs extreme — fully exposed to weather, soil, and organic growth durability, choose materials that look the part while holding up to variable — from daily garden walks to weekend entertaining traffic.
Try It Yourself
Upload a photo of your garden and InteriorPro's AI will redesign it in Brutalist style — photorealistic results in under 30 seconds.
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