
“We almost put the gazebo in the back corner. Seeing it near the patio on our own yard photo changed the plan.”
A gazebo anchors the whole yard, so the wrong size or spot is a costly redo. Photograph the space and see the shape, roof, and placement on your real yard before you order a kit.
Homeowners, DIYers, sellers & landscapers




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A gazebo is the centerpiece, and expensive to get wrong.
Round, oval, or rectangular, placed where you would actually put it, at a believable scale.
Too small or jammed in a corner is the usual gazebo mistake. Test the fit before you commit.
Shoot the yard, pick a roof, and see whether a hardtop or a canopy suits the space.
Modern, classic, and rustic gazebo looks, applied to a photo of your actual yard, not a stock one.




























One photo of the yard does it.
Shoot the area with the house and fence in frame so the gazebo lands in scale.
Choose the shape, roof (open, hardtop, or canopy), and material. Add screens, lighting, or a grill bay.
Get several gazebo layouts on your real yard and rule the wrong ones out fast.
What an honest gazebo concept has to get right.

Round, oval, or rectangular with an open, hardtop, or canopy roof, rendered in your yard so the proportion is a decision you can see.

Cedar, painted wood, or powder-coated metal, with screens, string lighting, or a grill bay placed where they would actually go.

See the gazebo near the patio, out on the lawn, or by the pool, with the path that connects it, before anything is poured.
Dozens of design styles for any outdoor space, ready in under a minute.
Real gazebo projects, from kits to custom builds.

“We almost put the gazebo in the back corner. Seeing it near the patio on our own yard photo changed the plan.”

“I show a client a hardtop versus a canopy on their own yard photo before quoting, and the decision is faster.”

“Round or rectangular by the pool was the debate. Comparing both on the real yard ended it in one evening.”
For gazebo and landscape pros generating client concepts at volume, with team access.
The usual ways to plan a gazebo, and where each one leaves you.
| Feature | Landscape designer | Design software | Guessing | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Getting to a design | ||||
| See it on your actual yard | ||||
| First design in under a minute | ||||
| No skills or software to learn | ||||
| Try many styles cheaply | ||||
| Cost & commitment | ||||
| Typical cost to start | $ | $$$$ | $$ | Free |
| Time to a usable concept | ~1 min | 1-3 weeks | Hours | — |
| Locked into one direction | ||||
| Confidence | ||||
| Decide before you spend | ||||
| Share concepts with a pro | ||||
Short answers before you upload.
Yes. It designs from your photo, so the gazebo lands at a believable scale where you would put it, not a stock yard.
Yes. Try round, oval, or rectangular with an open, hardtop, or canopy roof on the same photo.
Yes. Add screens, string lighting, or a grill bay and judge the scale before you build.
No. It is a concept to take to a builder or pair with a kit. It sets the size, roof, and placement, not footings, anchors, or permits.
OutdoorBrite is a paid product, with no free tier. Plans cost a fraction of hiring a designer and scale with how many designs you generate and the resolution you need.
Design the whole yard around the gazebo, not just the gazebo.
One photo. A gazebo you can picture. Concepts in seconds.