Midcentury White Garden Design Ideas
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Hursthouse Landscape Architects and Contractors
The landscape plan clarifies how all the components were integrated into the design on the 1.5 acre site.
Moss Yaw Design studio
Lavender, along with gravel, basalt and other native plantings add to the beautiful cool color palette, enhancing the architectural design while providing for a drought-tolerant and low-maintenance front yard.
Pacific Garden Design
After moving into a mid-century ranch home on Spokane's South Hill, these homeowners gave the tired landscape a dramatic makeover. The aging asphalt driveway was replaced by precast concrete pavers that coordinate with a new walkway of sandwashed concrete pads. A pared-down front lawn reduces the overall water use of the landscape, while sculptural boulders add character. A small flagstone patio creates a spot to enjoy the outdoors in the courtyard-like area between the house and the towering ponderosa pines. The backyard received a similar update, with a new garden area, water feature, and paver patio anchoring the updated space.
Blue Sierra Landscape Construction
Modern landscape with different gravels and poured in place concrete.
Ginkgo Leaf Studio
The shifted, wedge-shaped concrete panels of the front walk allow for an intersecting bed of grasses. Beach pebble runnels separate the panels while 'Summer Beauty' allium helps to soften the boundary between the driveway and the front walk. Renn Kuhnen Photography
Eve's Garden Design
This native-CA rich front yard welcomes guests with a custom arbor, large boulders, and naturalistic plantings.
Ginkgo Leaf Studio
Close up view of the beach pebble filled runnel within the concrete walk. These were custom-formed on site before the concrete was poured.
Renn Kuhnen Photography
Garden Stories
Poured concrete pavers bordered by Mexican pebbles contained with steel flat-bar edging.
Cascade Outdoor Design
After working with this client on their home a few years ago, we were given the opportunity to create a landscape design for one of their multi-family properties. The goal was to create a landscape that not only enhances the property and fits the style of the building, but is also as cost effective and low maintenance as possible. We achieved this by keeping a limited plant palette, utilizing gravel and artificial turf, and exploring various options for hardscape and screening to achieve the desired look without blowing the budget.
This was a "design only" project. Installation was coordinated by the homeowner and completed by others.
Photos by East Coast Virtual Tours
Midcentury White Garden Design Ideas
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