When casting a spell for seamless indoor and outdoor tranquility, architect Gil Schafer and landscape architect Stephen Mohr invoke an unlikely swirl of influences: old English barns, Japanese teahouses, and rocky cliffs. “The goal was to make this property extra special to compensate for it not being on the water,” says Schafer of this introspective courtyard near the coast in Camden, Maine.

gil schafer stephen mohr maine meditation garden terrace
Three tiers of cut granite beds and stone steps terrace a 40-foot elevation change.
ERIC PIASECKI

It’s part of a small farm compound that begins with a main house built like a bank barn (a multilevel building built into the side of a hill) and flanked with similarly shingled buildings that unfold into a courtyard. “The way they are each oriented inward dials up the discretion of the interior landscape,” says Mohr. So too does the abundance of rugged granite blocks used to define the water tables and garden beds, imparting a powerful composure to the design and lending a distinctive element of Maine’s coastline, notes Schafer.

“The use of stone is beautiful and the relationship between house and garden is spot on. One doesn't shout out at the other.”—Bunny Williams, author and interior designer
gil schafer stephen mohr maine meditation garden
A water garden cascades three levels, terminating in a small stone pool.
ERIC PIASECKI
gil schafer stephen mohr maine meditation garden apples
A ripening Cortland apple. ‘Bar Harbor’ hydrangeas bloom to the left of the walkway. 
ERIC PIASECKI

The defining one, perhaps, is a 50-foot stepped trough between apple trees that conjures “a moment of stillness and reflection,” says Mohr, noting that it serves as a calming metronome to visitors. By contrast, two terraces with narrow pools along the perimeter allow water to trickle down like a Japanese waterfall, he adds. Meanwhile, a lattice-design deer fence references an Asian screen hanging inside the main cottage. “We worked to conceive the building and garden as one, for a truly magical—and memorable—sense of place,” says Schafer.

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gil schafer stephen mohr maine meditation garden
In a central courtyard, Horvath and Cortland apple trees filter sunlight to a 50-foot antique granite trough.
Eric Piasecki

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2022 Outdoor Living Award Winner for Ultimate Courtyard Oasis. Design by G. P. Schafer Architect and Mohr & Seredin Landscape Architects.