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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  United Kingdom  





1.2  Australia  







2 Overview  





3 Usage  





4 Contents  





5 Gallery  





6 See also  





7 References  





8 External links  














Backyard






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


A back yard in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, in 1929
The back garden of Iford Manor was designed by Harold Peto.

Abackyard, or back yard (known in the United Kingdom as a back garden or just garden), is a yard at the back of a house, common in suburban developments in the Western world.[1]

It is typically residential garden located at the rear of a property, on the other side of the house from the front yard. While Western gardens are almost universally based on plants, the "garden" (which etymologically may imply a shorthand of botanical garden) may use plants sparsely or not at all. Hence, the terms yard and garden are for the context of this article interchangeable in most cases.

History

[edit]

United Kingdom

[edit]

In English suburban and gardening culture, back gardens have a special place.[2]InBritain there are over 10 million back gardens.[3] British planning require minimum distances between the rear faces of adjacent dwellings and so there is usually space for a back garden of some sort. In other countries, such as Australia, this does not apply and preference for buildings with a large footprint has tended to squeeze out the space at the rear.[4]

Australia

[edit]

In Australia, until the mid-20th century, the back yard of a property would traditionally contain a fowl run, outhouse ("dunny"), vegetable patch, and woodheap. More recently, these have been replaced by outdoor entertainments such as a barbecue and swimming pool.[5] But, since the 1990s, the trend in Australian suburban development has been for back yards to disappear as the dwellings now occupy almost all of the building plot.[1]

In higher latitudes, it is economical in low land value regions to use open land surrounding a house for vegetable gardening during summers and allow sunlight to enter house windows from a low horizon angle during winters. As land value increases, houses are built nearer to each other. In order to preserve some of the open land, house owners may choose to allow construction on the side land of their houses, but not build in front of or behind their house in order to preserve some remnants of open surrounding land. The back area is known as the backyard or back garden.

Overview

[edit]

A back garden arises when the main building divides the surrounding gardens into two. This happens especially in the high density housing of British cities and towns. A semi-detached house typical of the British suburbs of the 20th century will have front gardens which face the road and provide access. The back gardens in such cases will be more secluded and access will typically be via the dwelling or by a path around the side. A front garden is a formal and semi-public space and so subject to the constraints of convention and law. However, the back garden is more private and casual,[6] and so can be put to more purposes.

If the housing is terraced, then no side path is possible and access may be provided by an alley which runs behind the rear of the terrace. While buildings opening directly onto a street may not have a front garden, most will have some space at the back, however small; the exception being back-to-back houses found in northern industrial towns in England such as Leeds, but now mostly demolished. A private back yard with a "privy" (toilet) was a defining feature of the byelaw terraced house, a type of dwelling built to comply with the Public Health Act 1875.

Usage

[edit]

Because of weather constraints, it is usual to use a garden more in the summer than in the winter, although some usages are traditional, such as for a bonfire on Bonfire Night, 5 November. Similarly, daytime usage is more common than nighttime.

The back garden of the archdeacon of Canterbury contains a mulberry which is said to have been planted by Erasmus.

Functionally, it may be used for:

In fact, its functional and recreational use is so varied, that it cannot be easily categorised. Many of the freedoms of the use of the back garden come from the restrictions, social or legal of what are not done in the front.

Usually, clothes are not dried, vegetables are not grown, and sunbathing is not carried out in a front garden. All these can happen in the privacy of the back garden.

Traditionally, people treat a back garden as private to themselves, and not those they are neighbours to. The social etiquette of how one can greet and interact one's neighbours may be complex and defined by many informal social rules.

In some areas, talking to one's neighbours over the back wall (the side wall following the property boundary line) is usual, and is a welcome form of neighbourliness, while in other places it is not.

Contents

[edit]
A backyard of house in Tampere, Finland

Depending on the size of the backyard, it may have any number of items (or none), such as:

  • Buildings such as: barn,[8] chicken coop, doghouse, garage, gazebo,[8] accessory dwelling unit, outhouse, playhouse,[8] sauna, shed,[8] smokehouse, workshop, etc.
  • Compost bin[8]
  • Decking
  • Fencing
  • Garden
  • Garden furniture (bench, patio table and chairs, umbrella, etc.)
  • Landscaping with or without a lawn or just dirt
  • Playground equipment (sandbox, slide, swing set, etc.)
  • Renewable energy generator (solar panels, windmills, etc.)
  • Sandpit also known as a sandbox (US and Canada)
  • Storage tank
  • Swimming pool and/or hot tub
  • Swing_(seat)
  • Hammock
  • Vehicle
  • Waste container
  • Landscape lighting
  • [edit]

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ a b Tony Hall (2010). The Life and Death of the Australian Backyard. CSIRO Publishing. ISBN 9780643098169.
  • ^ S Chevalier (1998). "From woollen carpet to grass carpet: bridging house and garden in an English suburb". Material Cultures: Why Some Things Matter. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-52601-1. Every resident ... has a private garden divided into two areas, the front and the back garden whose social role is ...
  • ^ a b Jules N. Pretty (2007). The Earth Only Endures: On Reconnecting With Nature and Our Place in It. Earthscan. pp. 36. ISBN 978-1-84407-432-7.
  • ^ Tony Hall (2010), The Life and Death of the Australian Backyard, Csiro Publishing, p. 86, ISBN 978-0-643-09816-9
  • ^ Patrick Nicol Troy (2000). "The Big Backyard". A History of European Housing in Australia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 127–128. ISBN 9780521777339.
  • ^ Richard Webster (1999). Feng Shui in the Garden. Llewellyn Worldwide. p. 47. ISBN 1-56718-793-5. The back garden is usually more private and casual
  • ^ Alison Ravetz, Richard Turkington (1995), "Gardens and External Space", The Place of Home: English domestic environments, 1914-2000, Taylor & Francis, pp. 176–199, ISBN 978-0-419-17980-1
  • ^ a b c d e Paul Levine; Tom Begnal; Dan Thornton (1997). Building Backyard Structures: Sheds, Barns, Bins, Gazebos & Other Outdoor Construction. Sterling Publishers Pvt. Limited. ISBN 0806942169.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Backyard&oldid=1214371862"

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    This page was last edited on 18 March 2024, at 15:23 (UTC).

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