Skip to content Skip to footer

Lawn Begone: 8 Ideas for Front Garden Landscapes

They say you are what you wear. This is also true of your house. Your front yard makes a strong first impression. Here are seven of our favorite landscaping ideas to dress up the place:

1. Flower Garden

For more of this garden, see Garden Visit: The Hobbit Land Next Door. Photograph by Tom Kubik for Gardenista.
Above: For more of this garden, see Garden Visit: The Hobbit Land Next Door. Photograph by Tom Kubik for Gardenista.

My next-door neighbor in Mill Valley, California tore up the grass first thing when she moved into her house. The property is fenced, so it feels like a private world. The walk from the front gate to the stoop is only about 30 feet, but on the way you pass so much–a hydrangea grove, lemon trees, fragrant roses, Japanese maples, columbine, wisteria, herbs–that it can take days to get there if you stop to smell everything.

On the front porch, a potted orange begonia is all it takes to remind visitors of the flowers they’ve just walked past. Photograph by Tom Kubik for Gardenista.
Above: On the front porch, a potted orange begonia is all it takes to remind visitors of the flowers they’ve just walked past. Photograph by Tom Kubik for Gardenista.
A riot of color in a window box reinforces the theme. Photograph by Tom Kubik for Gardenista.
Above: A riot of color in a window box reinforces the theme. Photograph by Tom Kubik for Gardenista.

2. Gravel Garden

For more of this garden, see Before & After: A Grande Dame in LA’s Hancock Park. Photograph by Jennifer Roper.
Above: For more of this garden, see Before & After: A Grande Dame in LA’s Hancock Park. Photograph by Jennifer Roper.

The first time LA-based landscape designer Naomi Sanders saw the grand 1920s house in Hancock Park, it felt hemmed in despite its generous front yard. A maze of formal parterres and fussy plantings (“a million different plants”) were to blame.

She designed new hardscape elements (including a concrete front path to match the material of the stoop) and reduced the plant palette to three colors (green, white, and red). “I was really interested in looking at the work of Mark Rothko for inspiration, for that limited use of color for effect,” Sanders said.

By simplifying the plantings, Sanders made the boxwood parterres feel tailored instead of cluttered. Photograph by Jennifer Roper.
Above: By simplifying the plantings, Sanders made the boxwood parterres feel tailored instead of cluttered. Photograph by Jennifer Roper.
A front path of flagstone was replaced by concrete pavers. “It makes the hardscape feel more connected to the house,” says Sanders. Photograph by Jennifer Roper.
Above: A front path of flagstone was replaced by concrete pavers. “It makes the hardscape feel more connected to the house,” says Sanders. Photograph by Jennifer Roper.

3. Secret Garden

A mysterious front path invites visitors into Jean and Ken Linsteadt’s Mill Valley, CA front yard. Two pencil thin cypress trees flank–and define–the walkway. For more, see A Modern Garden Inspired by the Classics. Photograph by Nicole Franzen for Gardenista.
Above: A mysterious front path invites visitors into Jean and Ken Linsteadt’s Mill Valley, CA front yard. Two pencil thin cypress trees flank–and define–the walkway. For more, see A Modern Garden Inspired by the Classics. Photograph by Nicole Franzen for Gardenista.

Adblock test (Why?)

Leave a comment

Chat Icon