Vertical Garden Wall Ideas: How to Grow Plants on Any Wall
Vertical gardens are the fastest-growing urban gardening trend in the USA and Germany. Turn any bare wall — indoors or out — into a lush living display.
Why Vertical Gardening Is Exploding in Popularity
With urban living spaces shrinking on both sides of the Atlantic — from New York apartments to Berlin Altbau flats — vertical gardening has emerged as the most practical solution to lack of ground space. Google Trends shows searches for “vertical garden wall” have increased 340% in the USA and 290% in Germany over the past three years. The concept is simple: grow up, not out.
Types of Vertical Garden Systems
Pocket planters — fabric or felt pockets attached to a wall. Ideal for herbs and small annuals. Available from £15–60. Modular tile systems — interlocking panels that can be rearranged. Pallet gardens — a sanded, lined pallet mounted on a wall creates 10–15 planting pockets for almost no cost. Trellis with climbing plants — the lowest-cost version: a trellis panel and a vigorous climber like jasmine, ivy, or climbing hydrangea.
Best Plants for Vertical Gardens
For outdoor walls: Ivy (fast, evergreen), Climbing roses (beautiful, need training), Nasturtiums (edible, fast from seed). For indoor walls: Pothos (nearly indestructible), Heartleaf philodendron (tropical, fast), Herbs (basil, mint, parsley — the most practical indoor vertical garden).
Building a Simple Pallet Vertical Garden
Find a heat-treated (HT marked) pallet. Sand all surfaces smooth. Line the back and inner sections with weed fabric, stapling securely. Stand upright and fill each pocket with compost mixed 20% with perlite. Plant through the front sections. Within 2 weeks the plants anchor themselves and the pallet can be stood or hung vertically.
Germany’s Fassadenbegrünung
Germany is a world leader in building-integrated vertical gardens, known as Fassadenbegrünung. Many German cities (Berlin, Hamburg, Stuttgart) now offer grants for facade greening as part of urban cooling strategies. The German approach typically favours hardy climbers trained directly onto building surfaces — creating cooling, insulating green walls that reduce urban heat island effects by up to 8°C.