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Legacy Hardscaping

Front Yard Landscaping Ideas in Gloucestershire, UK

It’s much easier to come up with creative landscaping ideas for the back garden of your Gloucestershire home than it is for the front. Your back garden is secured and away from the outside world, making ideas like pool installation and building an outdoor kitchen viable. Those ideas aren’t viable for your front yard, even if the idea of waving hi to Susan next door as she passes by your house while you lounge in your pool seems like fun.

While front yards may have certain limitations, these constraints can actually spark creativity, especially if you try out some of my front yard landscaping ideas.

Idea 1: Say Hello to the Cotswold Style

Gloucestershire is home to the Cotswolds. With that comes a certain type of style, based on the region’s natural geology. That style is a perfect starting point for landscaping your front garden. You only need to check out some older Cotswold buildings to understand what I mean. Natural stone, often with a mellow and slightly yellow tone, defines those older houses. Rustic is the term I’d use and it’s that older style that can really make your front garden pop.

My experience shows that using traditional Cotswold stone to create pathways, walls, and edging lends a touch of local authenticity to a Gloucestershire home. Maintenance is also minimal with this type of stone. You don’t have to feed or water it like you would plants in your front garden.

Idea 2: Build a Stunning Front Patio

Front yard Patio in Gloucestershire

Your home’s frontage can often feel a little…underutilized. You have a lot of spare space with which you’re not doing a whole lot. A nice front patio can make that space usable while also adding some much-needed curb appeal to your Gloucestershire home.

A nice canopy built over the front door filled with wicker furniture underneath creates a welcoming feel. I also like the idea of using pergolas to create shade in the front garden. A fringe benefit of pergolas is that they’re also ideal for hanging baskets overflowing with flowers. Some trailing geraniums here and a handful of fuchsias there add some style and colour to an otherwise drab front garden.

Of course, you could also enclose your home’s frontage. Transform it into a relaxed seating area while creating a more natural look in the garden itself.

Idea 3: Create Flower Borders and Hedge Barriers

Hedge Barrier in a home

My front yard landscaping ideas so far have honed in on using stone and man-made materials to bring your front garden to life. Maybe a more natural look is what you want from your landscaping. Flowers and hedges are your friend if that’s the case.

Imagine two rows of flowers – think cottage favourites like lavender and foxglove – lining a grass path leading to your front door. Or use box or beech hedges to create some structure and add greenery onto a pebble or stone entryway, again combining natural features with man-made landscaping.

Idea 4: Use Curbs and Stone Edging

I touched on edging earlier as part of creating the Cotswolds style in your Gloucestershire front garden. What I didn’t mention is that stone edging – along with curbs – is great for framing flowerbeds. Use your edging to create a manicured look around the beds, as well as having it serve as an indicator for when it’s time to prune your flowers.

Edging and curbs also add some much-needed texture to gardens that would otherwise feel featureless. Both are design features that lend a more polished aesthetic. They’ll also serve as barriers that prevent your lawn from encroaching on the soil in your flowerbeds.

Idea 5: Build a Driveway

Sometimes, you just want front yard landscaping ideas that are as maintenance-free as possible. I think replacing the lawn altogether in favour of a sleek driveway might be your best solution if you don’t have green hands. You get something practical and low maintenance. Plus, a driveway adds value to your home by allowing off-road parking.

Your choices for driveway materials boil down to contemporary versus classic Cotswolds. You already know that I’m a fan of the latter style because it’s in keeping with the natural Gloucestershire aesthetic. However, if you go down the modern route, I recommend sleek lines and paving slabs ahead of pebbles. A pebbled drive may look great when it’s first installed but you’ll have to deal with the stones shifting every time you drive over them. Uneven driveways and potential damage to your vehicle can also be problems with the pebbled approach.

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