Your Greenhouse Shouldn't Just Grow Plants – It Should Be the Most Atmospheric Room You Own
A viral TikTok of a glowing greenhouse has everyone rethinking their setup. Here's exactly how to transform yours into the most atmospheric space you own.
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There is a TikTok video currently doing the rounds from user @kristinanevans that will make you look at your greenhouse in a whole different light (preferably candlelight). Her greenhouse space was glowing and decorated with a table and chairs, surrounded by plants on every side, and looked less like a place where you grow plants and more like the most magical room in the house.
It appeared to be filmed on an ordinary evening, and the result was the kind of content that stops everyone mid-scroll, not just gardeners. Also, I immediately went on Google to look up greenhouse prices, in hopes I could replicate this look.
If you felt a slightly desperate wanting, just as I did, you are absolutely not alone. Fortunately, you can transform your greenhouse from a purely functional space into somewhere you actually want to spend time, and this is actually far more achievable than you would think. I even talked to a few experts to get some very specific, practical ideas about how to do this well.
Article continues belowStart With Zoning
The single most important consideration when turning a greenhouse into a livable space is zoning, and it came up, unprompted, from every expert I spoke to.
Anh Ly, CEO and designer at minimalist furniture company Mim Concept, is very clear on the ratio: "I would keep roughly 70 percent dedicated to growing and 30 percent for sitting, dining, or reading." In practice, she says, that means one clear pathway, one small furniture grouping in weather-tolerant materials, and layered planting around the edges and overhead so the seating area feels immersed in the space but still completely usable.
Serge, a plant scientist specializing in plant-environment interactions at the University of Eastern Finland, agrees and adds a practical reason beyond aesthetics. "Optimal plant conditions like high humidity, dense planting, and intense light don't fully align with human comfort," he explains. Keeping a more intensively planted growing area separate from a slightly drier, better-ventilated space where people can actually sit.”
This simultaneously solves both problems: You get a beautiful, atmospheric room you actually want to sit in, and your plants get the conditions they actually need. It’s essentially a win-win situation.
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The Changes That Make the Biggest Difference
If you only do one thing, make it the floor. "The most transformative change is usually underfoot," says Anh Ly. "Once you add a real floor surface – gravel grids, brick, or stone pavers – the greenhouse immediately reads as a room." This gravel grid from Walmart is great for beginners, and is wear-resistant/corrosion-proof.
Conceptually, it’s a small shift, but visually, it’s huge. It’s also the single detail that separates a greenhouse thoughtfully designed from one that just happens to have a random chair in it.
The second most impactful change, according to Serge, is a seating area that feels as if you really wanted it there. "Once there's a place to sit, the greenhouse stops feeling purely functional and starts feeling like a space you spend time in." This sounds super obvious until you’ve seen a few greenhouses that have a folding chair shoved awkwardly into a corner at the last minute.
For the greenhouse plants themselves, Serge's advice is to think in layers rather than rows. "In natural systems, plants grow in layers, not rows – different heights, mixed textures, a few natural materials – and bringing some of that into a greenhouse makes a big difference without affecting plant performance." This is absolutely the difference between a greenhouse that feels like a living, breathing environment and one that’s just a storage unit, albeit a pretty one.
On Atmosphere – and the Candle Question
The TikTok that started all of this had lights with a subtle orange glow that gave off the look of candlelight, without the actual candles.
Anh Ly echoes this, saying, "They may look romantic for a photo, but in a dry, enclosed structure with timber shelves, fabric cushions, and foliage, they introduce unnecessary risk." Her recommendation is warm low-voltage sconces or sealed portable lamps instead. With the right choice, these can look just as atmospheric and won't keep you nervously watching the shelving.
Serge suggests warm, low-intensity LEDs for evening use specifically – they create a beautiful ambient glow without interfering with plant photoperiods, and without any of the fire risk. You can still have the magic. Just swap the candles for something that won't stress you out.
If you really like the look of the TikTok greenhouse video, you can replicate it with these GANA low-voltage LED string lights (available on Amazon).
A Space You Actually Want To Be In
Robert Bates, permaculturist and author of Why We Can't Stop Caring, has perhaps the most compelling argument for taking the atmospheric greenhouse seriously, and it goes beyond aesthetics.
In his work on how people engage with the spaces they tend, he's found that a purely functional space, however efficiently you've designed it, will never hold your attention or care over time. "The spaces that keep me engaged day-to-day aren't the most efficient ones – they're the ones that invite interaction. Where the light changes throughout the day, where I can easily water or harvest without friction, where I can pause for a minute and actually be in the space."
To really create some atmosphere, music goes a long way. Try this Bose SoundLink Flex Bluetooth waterproof speaker (available at Target) that comes in a variety of colors.
When a greenhouse is designed to reflect the person using it, like their routines, comfort, and the way they naturally move through a space, engaging in that space becomes almost automatic. "When care increases," Robert notes, "the system becomes more resilient."
Your plants will do better the more you’re in there, and you’ll want to be in there more because it’s a place you actually want to be. It’s a perfect circle, and all it takes is a table, a comfy chair, and the right lighting.

Sarah is a lifestyle and entertainment writer with over a decade of experience covering everything from celebrity news to home and style trends. Her work has appeared in outlets including Bustle, The Everygirl, Hello Giggles, and Woman’s Day. She also writes about the latest gardening news and emerging trends, from pollinator-friendly planting to small-space edible gardens and sustainable outdoor living. When she’s not covering a viral moment, she’s cultivating her own love of gardening and bringing a storyteller’s eye to all things green and growing.