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Forget Plant Stands: Cinder Blocks Created a Better Backyard Display

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Plant stands often limit how many containers fit into a small patio or backyard corner. Once the shelves fill up, the only option is buying another stand or spreading pots across the ground. Reddit user u/Accomplished_Pen616 found a different solution by stacking ordinary cinder blocks into a modular plant wall. Each opening became its own planter shelf, creating space for flowers, herbs, succulents, and foliage plants without building a permanent structure. Construction Cinder Blocks Became a Living Plant Wall The project starts with concrete cinder blocks stacked in an offset pattern. No mortar holds the blocks together, making the display easy to rearrange or expand as more plants are added. Every opening works as an individual planting space. Some hold flowering annuals, while others display trailing vines, succulents, colorful coleus, or ornamental grasses. The staggered layout keeps each pot visible instead of hiding plants behind one another. Different Plants Keep the Dis...

Bathroom Demolition Exposed Something No One Expected Behind the Tile

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Older bathrooms often hide surprises behind tile, but most homeowners expect drywall or cement board once demolition begins. This remodel uncovered something very different. u/Snoo_53440 Shared on Reddit by u/Snoo_53440 , the bathroom looked ready for a cosmetic update until demolition exposed plywood behind every tiled wall, including the shower. The house dates to 1958, yet the tile installed in 2003 had been attached directly to plywood. Despite that unexpected construction method, the homeowner found no significant mold and decided to move ahead with a complete redesign while preserving one original feature: the vintage bathtub. Heavy Tile Covered Almost Every Surface u/Snoo_53440 The original bathroom combined large diagonal ceramic tile across the walls and floor with darker accent bands that wrapped around the room. A wood vanity, laminate countertop, chrome fixtures, and gray painted walls completed a design that reflected an earlier remodeling trend rather than the home...

They Removed One Hallway Closet and Finally Had Room for a Kitchen Island

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Small condos often separate the kitchen from the entry with closets, narrow hallways, and partial walls. As more homeowners look for open layouts, some are finding that removing one hallway closet can change the entire floor plan. Reddit user u/rusted10 remodeled his daughter’s condo by removing the entry coat closet, opening two interior walls, relocating the refrigerator, and rebuilding the kitchen around a large island. A new pantry cabinet replaced the lost storage, creating a kitchen that feels larger without increasing the home’s footprint. Entry Wall Kept the Kitchen Out of Sight u/rusted10 The original entrance directed attention toward blank walls instead of the kitchen. A coat closet occupied the corner beside the entry door, while the refrigerator remained tucked inside a narrow alcove beyond the dividing wall. Visitors entered through a hallway that offered little connection to the main living space. The kitchen itself depended on older gray cabinets, dark...

A Landscaper Quoted $5,000. He Built the Retaining Wall for $250

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Steep backyard slopes often become nothing more than difficult grass to mow. Reddit user u/Liakada saw something different. Instead of paying a landscaper about $5,000 for a retaining wall, the homeowner spent six weekends reshaping the hill by hand, using leftover stone, reclaimed landscape timbers, divided plants, and only about $250 in new materials. u/Liakada The project cut a winding staircase into the slope, added a dry-stacked retaining wall, expanded the planting beds, and connected the different levels with new walkways. Most of the cost savings came from reusing materials already on the property or left over from previous landscaping projects. Existing Patio Faced a Steep Grass Hill u/Liakada The backyard already included a flagstone patio, planting beds, and a grassy hillside that separated the lower patio from the upper yard. The slope limited access and left little usable planting space. The retaining wall started where the patio ended, following the natural curve o...

650 Pavers Turned an Empty Patch of Lawn Into a Backyard Fire Pit Patio

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Most backyard fire pits sit on a simple concrete pad or a small gravel circle. Reddit user u/Swep1990 wanted something larger after weeks of watching tutorials and planning his first major outdoor project. When pavers went on clearance at Home Depot, he bought the materials and spent about two months working on weekends to build a circular patio centered around a fire pit. u/Swep1990 The finished project used about 650 brick pavers, with another 100 ordered to avoid running short. Every brick was cut and installed by hand in a herringbone pattern before the patio was locked together with polymeric sand. The complete build cost about $1,200 to $1,300, including delivery, base materials, and tools. Circle Marked the Patio Layout u/Swep1990 The first step was marking a large circle in the lawn before removing the grass. Instead of extending the existing concrete patio, the homeowner created a separate destination farther into the backyard. Keeping the fire pit away from the house l...

Backyard Borders Started Filling With Ornamental Grass Instead of Mulch

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Traditional flower beds often leave wide areas of bark mulch or bare soil between flowering plants. More homeowners are beginning to fill those spaces with ornamental grasses instead, creating borders that look fuller, move with the wind, and require far less visual maintenance throughout the growing season. Among the most popular choices is Stipa tenuissima ‘Pony Tails’, a fine-textured ornamental grass that weaves between perennials without hiding them. Rather than acting as the centerpiece, it becomes the layer that connects every flower, softens bold color combinations, and gives the entire planting a natural, meadow-inspired appearance. Stipa ‘Pony Tails’ Filled the Gaps Between Every Flower Stipa ‘Pony Tails’ creates the structure that holds this border together. Instead of leaving visible mulch between plants, the fine blades spread across the bed and weave around the pink yarrow, cosmos, and taller perennials. Every flowering plant appear...