Rooftop terrace with slat canopy
The first thing that registers is the shadow pattern. Narrow horizontal slats cut across the tiled rooftop terrace, turning the floor into a grid of light and shade. Around it, red planters and grey-green planting pull the eye along the edges, while black-framed glass doors connect the interior to the rooftop garden with large glass doors behind them. The result is a rooftop terrace with slat canopy that reads as one clear outdoor room rather than a loose collection of furniture and pots.
Slats, shade and a clear roofline
The canopy does more than cover a seating area. Its horizontal lamellae temper the light, mark the dining area on the rooftop terrace, and create privacy without closing the space off. From below, the structure gives the roofline a measured rhythm; from the terrace itself, the slats draw long lines across the paving. That repeating pattern is one of the strongest visual elements in the modern rooftop garden, because it ties the architecture, the floor and the furniture into the same frame.
The outdoor lounge under canopy sits directly in that sheltered zone. A low sofa arrangement and tables are placed close to the lamella wall, where the overhead structure and side panels hold the space in place. Nearby, the barbecue or outdoor kitchen corner sits under the same cover, keeping the service area visually part of the terrace instead of separating it from the seating. The arrangement makes the roof feel zoned, but not chopped up.
Large-format paving and the line of the terrace
The tiled rooftop terrace is laid with large-format paving, and the joints run in long, straight lines that reinforce the geometry of the space. The surface is calm in tone, which allows the planters and the canopy shadows to stand out. In several views, the paving continues right up to the planted edges, so the planting reads as part of the terrace structure rather than as decoration placed on top of it. That direct relationship keeps the modern rooftop garden legible at a glance.
Near the glass wall, the floor becomes a clear threshold between inside and out. The black profiles of the glazing give the transition a sharp outline, and the terrace appears immediately beyond the doors. Seen from indoors, the rooftop garden with large glass doors feels open and close at the same time: the eye moves out to the planters, then back to the lounge and dining zones under the canopy. It is a simple route, but a very visible one.
Planters that break up the surface
Red planters on the rooftop bring colour into an otherwise restrained palette of stone, metal and glass. Some are low and wide, others rise higher and work as edges or dividers. Their rectangular shapes echo the paving and the canopy structure, yet the planting softens their strict outline. Grey-green leaves and upright grasses lift above the rims, so the planters do not sit flat against the terrace; they add height and movement to the roof garden.
White and grey planters appear in other parts of the composition, often placed near the glass walls or along the outer edge of the terrace. Together with the red containers, they create a varied line of containers rather than a single uniform border. The modern rooftop garden uses that variation well. It keeps the planting readable, but still lets each block of greenery act as a spatial marker, especially where the terrace turns or where the seating zone begins.
Planting as edge and divider
Some of the planters read almost like low walls. They hold clipped greenery close to the terrace perimeter and give the roof a stronger boundary without using heavy construction. In close-up views, the leaf texture and the red surfaces of the containers do much of the visual work. They sit against the smooth paving and the horizontal slats, which makes the roof garden feel composed through contrasts rather than through ornament.
Dining, lounging and the service corner under one cover
The dining area on the rooftop terrace is positioned under the canopy, where the slats above and the open sides around it make the setting practical without making it closed. Chairs line up around the table, and the structure behind them keeps the zone visually anchored. A little further along, the barbecue area appears as part of the same sheltered strip. Nothing in the images suggests a kitchen that competes with the seating; instead, the service corner sits beside the table and lounge as another part of the roof’s daily use.
The outdoor lounge under canopy is the softer of the two main zones. Its lower seating, tables and nearby planting sit against the lamella wall and the edge of the terrace, where the shadows are strongest. The canopy also changes the way the floor is read. Under direct sun, the paving is plain and open; under the slats, it picks up lines and tone shifts that make the surface more graphic. That contrast gives the rooftop terrace with slat canopy its clearest spatial rhythm.
Inside and out in one view
One of the strongest details is the direct view through the large glass doors. The black frames slice the wall into neat sections, and the rooftop garden appears almost as an extension of the room inside. From that angle, the terrace is not just an exterior platform; it is a continuation of the interior sequence, with the paving, planters and canopy all visible from within. The eye moves easily between the inside floor and the tiled rooftop terrace outside.
That connection matters because it gives the roof garden its sense of order. The glazing, the slatted cover, the planters and the furniture all follow the same clear logic of line and zone. No one element dominates. Instead, the rooftop terrace with slat canopy is built from visible relationships: shadow against stone, planting against hard edges, and open glass against the sheltered outdoor room. The project holds those pieces together without overloading the roof, and the photographs make that restraint easy to read.
Want to see more of Knops Tuindesign? View the page of Knops Tuindesign for even more great projects and company information.








