Explore an immersive oceanfront garden just outside of Rio de Janeiro, with an atmosphere that packs a paradisiacal punch

Brazil-based landscape designer Rodrigo Oliveira created a horticultural jewel in a coastal town near to Rio de Janeiro

Swimming pool and palm trees
(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

In a coastal town approximately an hour and a half from Rio de Janeiro, nestled betwixt the chlorophyll-rich forest and glittering blue waters of the sea of Mangaratiba, sits the beautiful Patious house, with a serious architectural pedigree, sensational views, and a landscape design that is the culmination of several garden ideas woven into one.

Patious house is the product Studio MK27, and the landscaping is by designer Rodrigo Oliveira, who could see, right from the very first site visit, that negotiating the sloping topography and the varying visual openings of the land – the dense riparian vegetation on one side and the beach on the other – would be both physically and intellectually challenging.

Part of his approach to forming the design for this plot was a carefully curated list of plants; the result is a garden design that can naturalize easily and still has a discernible integrity. Here we stroll through the garden as Rodrigo shares some of the combinations of plants he uses in his design.

Patious House

Sitting room opening up to tropical garden

Main plants Wavy-leaf philodendron (Philodendron undulatum), Jamaican fern (Thelypteris jamaicensis). Tree Mulungu (Erythrina verna).

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

The house is split into two single-storey buildings, connected by a central courtyard garden.

One building opens up to ocean vistas, the other houses the bedroom suites, each with its private courtyard, too.

As you arrive, the garden unfurls slowly in front of you. The central courtyard garden is the heart of the project, with a fire pit, entertaining areas, and views slicing through the centre of the house.

The courtyard garden

The garden to a beach house leading to an open plan kitchen with the beach beyond

Tree (right side) Mulungu (Erythrina verna). Main groundcovers and plants (left side) Guaimbê (Philodendron bipinnatifidum), green liriope (Liriope spicata). Main groundcovers and plants (right side) green pleomele (Dracaena reflexa 'Virens'), wavy-leaf philodendron (Philodendron undulatum).

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

The plant composition blends species of varying sizes, all sitting intermingled, cheek and jowl, with no rigid hierarchies.

Instead of being planted in fixed layers, they are planted freely, so there is a constant presence of greenery and the garden remains illuminated even with the dense vegetation, as a result of the careful scaling between species.

Tropical garden

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

Among the masses of evergreen ferns, three specimens of the majestic Brazilian Mulungu tree (Erythrina verna) emerge.

These are beautiful trees that punctuate the space perfectly, growing up to 39ft tall and producing a profusion of coral red flowers over summer.

Tropical garden with views to sea

Views from the courtyard, through the house and out to sea

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

According to Rodrigo Oliveira, the courtyard was 'conceived as if a bird had scattered seeds by chance, creating a spontaneous, organic, and welcoming garden – as if it had always been there.'

Tropical garden

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

The kitchen-dining room opens out to the courtyard for entertaining all year round.

The plants chosen have a propensity to grow rigorously and retain dark, rich green leaves, so to create a space with year round good looks and no discernible seasons.

An evening shot of a sitting room with a tropical garden

View of the sitting room and dining room from the beach side of the house, looking back to the courtyard garden

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

The ocean facing garden

Walk through the house, and you are now greeted by magnificent horizons out to sea. A whole different microclimate altogether.

The spectacular views do most of the talking here, but Rodrigo's strategic planting makes you feel as though you're immersed in planting with no boundaries. An illusion that is far harder to pull off than it might seem.

Beach house

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

A Sunshade Tree (Terminalia catappa) was chosen for this section, for its slender trunk and light canopy, that casts gentle, light dappled shade without blocking the landscape.

Along the sides, flower beds with fruit-bearing species and medium-sized trees preserve privacy from neighboring residences.

Modern house with pool looking out to sea

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

Private courtyards

Many of the bedrooms throughout the house have their very own private courtyard, each of which Rodrigo tackled with equal aplomb.

Each of these courtyards was intended to be a hushed, soothing space offering a private refuge- a place to feel secure amidst raw nature.

Tropical bathroom garden

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

The plants used to achieve this include the Swiss cheese plant (Monstera deliciosa), rabbit’s foot fern (Davallia fejeensis), which looks tremendously sculptural with its hairy ribbed leaves, somewhat tarantula-like, and wavy-leaf philodendron (Philodendron undulatum), which is perfectly suited to indoor jungle gardens.

All of these plants are evergreen, and all are happy in the humid, oftentimes muggy, climate in this area.

Open plan modern bathroom with a tropical courtyard garden

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

Around the courtyard and walkways, humidity-tolerant plants have been used in abundance.

These include rhapis palm (Rhapis excelsa), macarthur palm (Ptychosperma macarthurii), and clever groundcover plants have been utilized with the likes of green liriope (Liriope spicata), mini pilea (Pilea glauca), and even, most unusually, walking iris (Neomarica candida).

Tropical garden in the evening

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

Other uncommon tropical perennials can be discovered here, such as red ginger (Alpinia purpurata), which blooms year-round in warm climates, and an enormous variety of philodendron, including split-leaf philodendron (Philodendron bipinnatifidum), wavy-leaf philodendron (Philodendron undulatum), and xanadu philodendron (Philodendron xanadu).

Tropical garden

Lush, tropical planting with the striking red blooms of Red Ginger (Alpinia purpurata)

(Image credit: Pedro Kok)

Shop plants in this garden


This design is so rich, so verdant, and so gloriously green, it brings you into an almost meditative state of mind.

Home to some of the very best tropical plants, interspersed with grasses, ferns, and trees, each perfectly judged for an equatorial landscape, this garden design is a lesson in carefully managed reduction and complex planning that delivers a decidedly uncomplicated, quietened feeling when in situ.

UK Editor

Sophia Pouget de St Victor is the UK Editor at Homes & Gardens, leading the editorial direction for the UK facing Homes & Gardens website. She brings readers the latest trends, expert insights, and timeless design inspiration tailored for a UK audience.

She has previously worked in the luxury homes and interiors industry and studied Garden Design in London, where she mastered her passion for creating landscapes that have a visceral impact on their onlookers. Home, though, is where Sophia's heart is. While she adores a wide variety of interior styles, she prefers interiors with a uniqueness that challenges any definable style. That said, there's little she finds more indulgent than walking down Pimlico Road and admiring the window display at Robert Kime; she has always found his interiors perfectly judged for a home that exudes an easy, unforced elegance.

Sophia lives in West London with her partner, along with two very naughty wiry terriers, and a plump cat named Lettuce.

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