Mimosa & Zodchiy
Mimosa Mimosa
I was thinking about how a quiet garden could fit into a city skyline, and I wondered if you ever considered designing a green space that lets people feel at peace with the buildings around them.
Zodchiy Zodchiy
That’s actually one of the little ideas I keep sketching in my notebook. If you want people to feel calm among glass and steel, the green space has to become a refuge that’s also part of the structure. Think vertical gardens that wrap around a façade, a roof terrace with a small pond, or a narrow pocket park that runs between blocks. The trick is to make every leaf, every stone placement feel intentional, yet flexible enough that the city can breathe around it. I love the idea of a quiet garden that feels like a secret, but I also know it’s hard to keep the vision from becoming a maze of details. Still, if you can balance that obsessiveness with a little room for people to wander, you’ll get the peace you’re looking for.
Mimosa Mimosa
It sounds so beautiful—just imagine a quiet path where the air smells like rain on leaves, and people can pause and breathe. The trick is to let each plant have its own space, so the garden feels like a living conversation rather than a strict design. A gentle touch of greenery can soften the edges of steel and glass, and people will find their own little secret within. Keep sketching those peaceful corners, and the city will feel like a softer place.