During my after-holiday-get-organized mode, I discovered all these past garden projects I had taken pictures of, but never posted them on the blog. Remember that “living wall” I bragged about? Well, it’s a dead wall now, but there is much to be learned, so I’ll post about it soon. I’ll start my 2011 DIY project post with my new hanging gutter garden that will be featured in the upcoming book Garden Up! by Susan Morrison and Rebecca Sweet.
Why Bother with a Gutter Garden?
For me, I have plenty of space to grow all the edibles I want, however, many apartment dwellers are confined to balconies, or small patios, and a collection of containers can start to look cluttery and cost a lot of money up front. Gutter gardens are a great way to take advantage of the vertical spaces around your home to grow flowers, edibles and create a stylish space divider or privacy screen without spending too much money.
Oh, and the slug issue – that’s just it, there is none! Not to say this design is pest free. You’ll still have to deal with flying pests, but you can easily wrap some row cover material around the gutters to allow sunlight in, but keep the flying buggers away from your spinach. Note to self: this is great blog idea – more to come on this issue.
Other gutter garden designs have suggested anchoring them on the side of your house. Although this is not a bad option, I’d rather not drills holes into my siding or worry about water sitting between the gutters and my siding. If you rent, I doubt your landlord would be into you screwing a bunch of holes in the siding either.
How to Make a Modern Gutter Garden
Before we start the DIY process of making the hanging gutter garden, I should clarify that I made this gutter garden with a few materials from Feeney, an architectural products company right in my backyard. Most of these materials can be purchased at your local hardware store, with the exception of Feeney’s super sleek cross clamps. You can buy less attractive hardware attachments at a hardware store.
| Materials | Tools |
|---|---|
| 1 – 8′ PVC white rain gutter cut into 3 32″ sections | Cordless Drill with drill bit set |
| 6 – PVC white gutter end caps | Hand saw or hack saw |
| 2 – 1/8″diameter steel cables cut to desired length | T-square or straight edge |
| 6 – Feeney Cross Clamps (see image below) | Tape measure |
| 6 – 1/8″ diameter Feeney steel rods | Permanent marker |
| 2 – Galvanized eye hooks | Level |
| Potting soil and Plants | Eye protection |
Close up of Feeney’s super sleek cross clamps.

Let’s get started already…
- Determine the center of your gutters and draw a reference line (otherwise your gutter won’t hang right).
- Mark and drill the holes for the steel cable rods. Find a drill bit the same diameter as the cable to minimize the wiggle room.
- Space drill holes a few sizes larger to make sure you get good drainage (plant roots hate sitting in water for long periods of time).
Once you have all your gutter holes drilled, you’re ready to hang this bad boy. Be patient…we’ll be planting very soon.
- Locate a spot that gets at least 4 hours of sun. I placed mine on the cross beams of a pergola I built a couple of years ago.
- Drill pilot holes (a hole slightly smaller in diameter than the screw diameter) to make screwing in the eye hook a lot easier. Make sure the holes are the same distance as the steel cable so they hang straight down.
- Slide the gutters through the holes and secure them with the cross clamps at your desired heights. You’ll notice I placed mesh tape (normally used for drywall joints), left over from another project, over the drainage holes to keep the soil from seeping. However, I think the holes are small enough, this step is not necessary. I did it out of habit.
- Secure the gutter with the cross clamps and half circle steel rods (Note: I bent the steel rods around my Nalgene bottle. It just happened to be the perfect diameter of the gutters).
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Now you’re ready to fill it with organic potting soil and plant them with your choice of shallow rooted plants. I found watering to be easier with a narrow spout watering can like this Aqua Genie Watering Can. Hoses will blast your soil all over the place and rain-style spouts will water your plants and not the soil (note: water your soil NOT your plants).

Plant Picks for Gutter Gardens
Shallow rooted edibles and annual flowers should grow easily in a gutter garden, making this project perfect for small space gardens, like balconies, or just to add visual interest to an otherwise boring patio. Scroll down to see how the plants filled in a month after planting.
Here’s a list of edibles to experiment with in your new gutter garden:
- Arugula, spinach, swiss chard, kale and all kinds of lettuces
- Annual herbs – cilantro, parsley, chives
- Strawberries – buy bare roots to save money and make planting easier
- Root Veggies – beets, radishes and maybe shallow carrot varieties like Tonda di parigi
- Annual Flowers – marigolds, nasturtiums, pansies and violas
Hanging Gutter Garden Featured in Garden Up!
I’d like to plug in some shameless self-promotion, as well as highlight the upcoming book, Garden Up! (scheduled to publish this spring) from two of my favorite garden designer/garden writer friends, Rebecca Sweet and Susan Morrison. Guess who’s DIY gutter garden will be featured in their new book? Moi!
Rebecca and I cover a wide range of vertical gardening ideas in our book, but are most excited about the amazing DIY projects ingenious gardeners all over the country created on their own. We follow Jayme’s blog and know she’s always experimenting. When she told us she was building her own gutter garden, we jumped at the chance to include it! – Susan Morrison
Check out their cool Garden Up! video Susan put together for their book. Thanks to Susan Morrison, Rebecca Sweet and Cool Springs Press for including my gutter garden in Garden Up!
Gutter Garden in October
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Gutter Garden in November
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
More acknowledgments: I recently found new inspiration from a fellow DIY blogger, Karen from The Art of Doing Stuff. Her blog is less than a year old and she is kicking butt with countless DIY projects from making a Halloween wreath, to Holiday container designs, to how to cutting onions. Check her out if you’re the DIY type.





























Creative and innovative !
One of the coolest gutter made hanging gardens that I have seen is in The Moss Room which is a cool drinking and eating place in the Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. They took rectangle shaped gutters, pinned them to the wall and then attached slate tiles to the face. The troughs are planted with ferns, epiphytes and mosses.
The look is wonderful and replaces the failing living wall of moss that was previously installed .
Jayme, I saw these photos once before and I still love the idea. I’m thinking of hanging some off my vegetable garden fence posts, just to create a little extra space and to keep my salad greens away from the rabbits. They’ll look great, too.
wonderful small space gardening project or just fun to make and grow the everyday edible in : ) Thank you for the share Annie
Love it! What a great way to re-use, re-purpose!
Now that is super cool! I just need to find a spot where it won’t get blown to Kansas, before I give it a try.
Great job!
I never even thought about the rabbits Marie. They are not an issue where I live, just the slugs and leaf miners – oh how I can’t stand leaf miners! I can’t wait to see your photos if you do build a gutter garden.
Thanks for your nice comments Annie and Rebecca. I had a blast putting it together.
I will have to google the gutter garden from the Academy of Sciences in San Fran. Sounds awesome Michelle. Thanks for sharing AND for the nice comments.
Great idea, and I can’t wait to try it, but…
8′ PVC white rain gutter cut into 3 36″ sections
36″ X 3 = 108
108 / 12 = 9
Neat!!! I love it. Thanks for the tips and how-to’s.
Love this!
One little tidbit, though. If you cut three 36″ sections from an 8′ long gutter, you’ll end up with two 3′ long pieces and a 2′ long piece, not three 3′ long pieces. The pieces should be cut at 32″ to get equal lengths and use up the entire gutter piece.
Great idea! Thanks for sharing. I’m looking forward to setting one of these up in my balcony.
This looks great! Do you think I can do something like this in my apartment, hanging in front of a window? We’d love to grow some plants inside, and it has to be high enough so the cats won’t get at it.
Wow…this gives me all kinds of ideas for gardening out of the reach of DEER! We really have to be smart around here…and plant higher than 10 feet or fence higher than 10 feet. Of course it might be challenging to harvest from a ladder, but could be worth it!
Wow, this is fantastic! I just came across your site via Apartment Therapy. I’ll be subscribing right away. And I would LOVE to link to this if you didn’t mind.
Thanks Rachel! I bet this would look fab on your balcony, great screen idea too! Of course, please feel free to link to this post.
I’m so lucky I don’t have to deal with deer in my backyard Cherrie. My dogs are trouble enough AND I now have 4 chickens to deal with. Love the poop, and the soon-to-be fresh eggs, but they eat everything in sight! Also think about the difficulties in watering from that high too. A shnazzy drip system would solve that problem though.
Hmm, this is a good question Anna. I would totally rig something like this gutter garden in front of my apartment window. But what I’m thinking requires drilling in to the siding, how open is your landlord? If you send me photos, I can help you problem solve (nestinstyle -at- gmail.com).
Very cool Laura. I’d love to see photos if you do!
Whoa Beth, talk about brain-to-keyboard fail! Thank you for catching that error. It’s supposed to be 32″ NOT 36″. I just fixed the error on the blog post. THANK YOU!
Yep, Beth pointed this out too! I just changed the dimensions to 32″ on the blog post. Thank you for letting me know! Good luck with the project and remember to water often.
Just love the gutter garden idea!
I was searching home depot’s website for “cross clamp” and wasn’t able to come up with anything. Is there hardware that performs the same purpose for the 1/8″ cable but is not called a “cross clamp?” Any info will be helpful.
Thanks.
where can i buy the feeney cross clamps and wire?
This is so cool and I want to do it… but I had a failed experiment with a hanging tomato plant last year and finding out it needed to be watered three times a day. Would that be a concern with this type of garden?
I love your hanging gutter garden it really is a great idea and I like all of the pictures you included. Your presentation is very clear and easy to understand. You did a great job and I give you a thumbs up and 5 stars *****.
I have a question… what about chemicals from the plastic (like BPA or worse) leeching into the soil and into your vegetables? Gutters aren’t manufactured with food-growing in mind.
I’d be very reluctant to do this unless I knew it was safe. Those who are “in the know” won’t store their food in plastic containers. Should we be growing our food in them? Have you looked into this?
I’m hanging these in front of my windows using curtain rod hardware and a strong pole. Will place a drip tray / planter underneath on windowsill or a table. Thanks for this great idea! Also, I was going to screen my porch, but I think I’ll hang these and grow citronella and some other insect repellant plants. Any suggestions?
Oh, I want to attract hummingbirds too. This is going to be fun!
can’t see you growing carrots in this. kinda limits what you can grow but cute idea
Yes, Nancy, you’ve pointed out the limitations of this kind of hanging garden. I plan to plant succulents in it this year. Takes a lot of watering since the container is so shallow.
Herbs are a great choice for repelling insects and attracting beneficial insects. Check out this article from Herb Companion Magazine for specific varieties. As far as the hummingbirds go, here’s an article from the Old Farmer’s Almanac about creating hummingbird habitats from the ground up. But for the gutter garden, I would try the alliums (chives), catmint, mint, pansies and zinnias.
Yes, Kandyce, this garden would need to be watered often. The smaller the container, the more often it needs to be watered. I would recommend you plant succulents in this type of garden instead.
Awesome idea.i will definitively try this out
This is such a well thought out plan. There is definitely a use for this on my balcony. As an apartment dweller there isn’t much room for vertical growth to this is perfect! Thanks for sharing.