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Landscaping front yard -- small & sloping toward house

16 years ago

Hello fellow gardeners! I was wondering if I could get some ideas for my front yard landscaping from you ...

It is a difficult area to landscape. First of all, the front yard is not very deep -- about 25 feet from front porch out to street. Secondly, it slopes downward towards our house -- about 3-3.5 foot drop from street level. Thirdly, we have full SW sun exposure with very little tree shading (secondary to neighborhood being clear-cut for new construction).

I have attached some photos to show the yard to you ...

There are 2 areas that I want to plant up further.

1) Next to sidewalk: There is already a Natchez crape myrtle in place. I would like to plant another tree adjacent to sidewalk so as to further screen our front porch and yard from sidewalk.

2) Behind mailbox (next to driveway): This strip of our property is somewhat narrow (10 feet max), most severely sloping and with the greatest exposure to winds cutting through, esp in wintertime. I would like to consider an evergreen as we would like to create privacy -- cars drive downhill and the road angles diagonally toward our house such that there is little privacy during the daytime and the headlights show up inside our house at nighttime.

My husband and I have been thinking about these areas for several months, but not sure about the best solutions to create privacy for us, yet not have the plantings overwhelming our house (mostly due to the downward slope).

Thanks so much for any ideas!!

Comments (5)

  • 16 years ago

    I am so sorry. I thought that I could attach photos right before posting, but I guess not. Will continue to try to figure this out ASAP, or please advise if you have done this before (I am a newbie!). Thanks :)

  • 16 years ago

    Sounds like a perfect setting for two things - retaining walls, and conifers.

    Special conifer cultivars might be very useful, restricted size and profile, offering a variety of shape and colour, so something nice for you to look at while blocking views in and wind. They love sun, as long as there is adequate water, so they are perfect for protecting you from it. A deciduous canopy tree might also be good to block sun from overhead in summer. But it sounds like you need something evergreen to the ground to block those headlights year-round.

    To post photos, upload them to a free photohosting site like Photobucket, and then copy the html code from the photo to the body of the message here in GW. The photos should show up when you preview the message. Alternatively, look into putting a photo on the gallery side of this forum, but that doesn't get much traffic and will require an extra click from this thread.

    KarinL

  • 16 years ago

    you said the property slopes toward the house..if so..the most important thing for you to do before anything else is to make sure there is drainage to take water away from your homes foundation.

    you can put in a french drain that will route water around your house.

    after that then think about the landscaping..

  • 16 years ago

    Hello there! 25Â feet sounds like a lot of space to take care of your slope with some rocks or a decorative retaining wall. Check out this site I just saw. They use large boulders. http://www.rockstructures.com/index.php?o=walls

    IÂd also illuminate that much yard if itÂs sloping towards your home with some solar accent lights (being on SW side) to bring some life at night. Check out these guys: http://www.yoursolarlink.com/solar-accent-lights

    Good luck with your design! Sounds like a fun project. :-)

  • 16 years ago

    Sort of repeating what others are saying here, but wonder how you feel about retaining walls? Also, how aware are you of the drainage issues? It sounds like this might be a new home? What has the builder done to insure that water flowing down that slope won't be a problem for your home?

    Also, I disagree with Ronbre. Not about the drainage concern, but about just handling that before you think about landscaping. Heavens, that is a part of the whole landscaping process. If you throw in a French drain and then decide you need the retaining wall Well, itÂs a classic example of why one needs to make a careful comprehensive plan for your property before you put in an fd or go out looking for plants.

    The spacing seems problematic to me, but I can imagine a higher and lower tier to your property, divided by a retaining wall. Such a wall can be extremely lovely, but if it were designed in your space, it would be more important for its function of protecting your home. Each "tier" of your yard that the retaining wall would create would be more or less level. The lower level -- though virtually flat -- would be properly graded with a slope away from the foundation. If possible, this wall would follow the contours of your property or would be designed to look as though it does. Steps would need to be designed to allow for access to the sidewalk / mailbox.

    The frentch drain  which, by the way, is a sort of artificial underground stream bed, often not visible at the surface -- would be at the base of the retaining wall some 10 to 12 feet ? from your foundation.

    Cost? Not cheap. I have no clue if thatÂs what your situation needs, but addressing the significant negative slope toward your home is at least as high a priority as screening for privacy and planting for shade.

    ThatÂs where doing tons of background research on the landscape design process is needed to help make sure you arenÂt missing something. The cool thing is that once you are clear about what has to be achieved in your front yard design in order for you to be happy, certain solutions will start working together. If, after youÂve considered the worse gully washer that could happen, you decide that some sort of drainage work needs to be done, then whatever choice you make about it could also work with other objectives. I can imagine, for instance, a retaining wall enhancing the sense of shelter.

    Paying for it? Ah, thereÂs the rub. But if you know what your dream front yard needs to be, then you might be able to work toward achieving it.

    Hope so.

    Wellspring