Laundry poles resting on a makeshift wooden frame on the ground floor of an old apartment complex just off the high-fashion street of Omotesando provide support for a hanging garden construction of twisted clothes hangers and simple potplants.





Materials: Laundry Pole, Clothes Hangers
Location: Just off Omotesando, Shibuya
(Originally posted on Tokyo-DIY-Gardening.org)
Thick tar soup in generic paint can. Evidence of smoko time at the local taxi stand.



Materials: Can
Location: Akishima, Tokyo
Very direct way of letting local pet owners know how the doings of their dogs are viewed by residents of a small apartment complex.
Cute dog sign adds the finishing touch.


Materials: Board, Marker
Location: Akishima, Tokyo
PET plastic bottles form vegetable plots in West Tokyo.
It’s interesting to see a material that usually acts as a pest deterrent incorporated into the construction of the garden.





Materials: PET Bottles, Metal Straps
Location: Kokubunji, Tokyo
(Originally posted on Tokyo-DIY-Gardening.org)
Over 1/2 a meter ‘step up’ to the front door eased with concrete slabs.
Influence of the ‘flat plot at all costs’ ethic in full effect.




Materials: Concrete
Location: Nagoya
Judging from the bottles concreted into the ends of the breeze block planters, these trees have been here for decades.
They seem to have adapted their growth to the cramped residence while becoming large enough to provide a modicom of privacy and shade. Fresh pruning evidences ongoing care and attention.
I’m impressed that large plants could be grown in such an unforgiving, soil-less environment.






Materials: Breeze Blocks, Bottles
Location: Minami-ku, Nagoya
(Originally posted on Tokyo-DIY-Gardening.org)
A line of bricks provides just enough space to add color to a bleak footpath.
Signs of life.






Materials: Brick
Location: Minami-ku, Nagoya
(Originally posted on Tokyo-DIY-Gardening)
Curbside tiered garden constructed on a base of two step benches, secured with breeze blocks and wire.
While making delightful use of the only outdoor space on the cramped corner plot (molded right to the edge), this garden guides visitors to the desired approach to the front door and presumably cuts down on hit-and-run pamphlet deliveries.





Materials: Step Bench, Wire, Breeze Blocks
Location: Nagoya
Disintegrating polystyrene planters provide a colourful point of integration between the residence, plot and street.
Flexible, tiered, lithe.




Materials: Polystyrene boxes
Location: Nagoya
Easier access step created with breeze block and concrete.



Materials: Breeze Block, Concrete
Location: Nagoya
Clothes hangers stored outside on a piece of string hung from the rafters. Compact, convenient.



Materials: String
Location: Nagoya
Problematic barrier post made more visible by affixing an old traffic cone with wire.



Materials: Wire, Traffic Cone
Location: Nagoya
This circular planter in front of an apartment complex is constructed of traditional Japanese roofing tiles.
Light on the ground and easily dismantled yet with more presence and permanence than the usual plastic planter box.
I love the reuse of traditional housing materials in the grounds of one of the symbols of Japanese homogenous mass-produced housing. I wonder if the tiles came from a house that originally occupied the land (and if the owner now resides in one of the apartments).





Materials: Roof Tiles
Location: Nagoya
Quiet gardens nestle up against apartment complex walls and fences, far from the controls of the centre – in planters and planted directly in the earth.
These side spaces, edges – passage territories – are just the right mix of light, elbow room and ‘half-hiddenness’ to act as invitations to garden.
(see The Open City by Richard Sennett (PDF link) for a discussion of passage territories)



Materials: Pots
Location: Nagoya
Foam and duct tape create a safe + scratch free parking spot in a tight location.
(Note also how in the left-hand space storage trumps cars)





Materials: Duct Tape, Foam
Location: Nagoya
Apartment structure and door frame form two posts for a clothesline made of string right in front of the washing machine.


Materials: String
Location: Nagoya
Hand made sign notifying public toilet users of a shift in the toilet paper dispenser.
I love how the draft in pencil bears no relation to the final copy written in marker.


Materials: Marker, Paper
Location: Nagoya
Traditional, semi-decommissioned blackboard for leaving messages at the train station gets new life as a playground for idle hands.




Materials: Chalk
Location: Nagoya