The vision
Transform the front garden into an elegant, established country-estate landscape — keeping the mature trees, the healthy roses and the generous lawn that already make it special. The aim is to strengthen the garden's bones, not to fill every space.
What this garden must do
- Feel elegant and established from day one.
- Deliver interest in every season.
- Carry fragrance through much of the year.
- Stay achievable for DIY, within roughly £1,000–£2,500.
- Preserve the mature trees and a substantial lawn.
- Create a strong focal point through roses and layered planting.
The design at a glance
Soft, fragrant, romantic, structured and layered — understated elegance. Five zones do the work, with the expanded rose island as the star.
Zone A · Rose Island
The centrepiece. A 5.0–5.5m oval bed, scaled up so it reads as intentional against the lawn and house.
Zone B · Rear Border
Deep mixed border (1.5–2.0m) for year-round structure. Expected to be the strongest feature by Year 5.
Zone C · Shade & Scent
Right-side border that works with the trees' shade — hydrangea, sarcococca, grasses.
Zone D · Bench Garden
A visible English-bench destination in the rear-right, framed by a climbing rose and a Japanese maple.
Zone E · The Lawn (kept)
The lawn is a strength, not a problem. Keeping it generous protects the sense of scale and luxury.
The palette
Blush pink, soft apricot, cream and soft white. No bright reds.
Planting list
Tick each plant once it's in the ground. Quantities follow the plan; the rear border is where most of the magic builds over time.
Roses
Keep all the existing healthy, repeat-flowering scented roses. Reduce the large evergreen shrub crowding them so the roses become the stars. Then add:
Rear border — Zone B
Structure & seasonal succession, 1.5–2.0m deep.
Shade & scent — Zone C
Works with shade from the trees. Few roses here.
Bench garden — Zone D
A traditional English bench in the rear-right, visible from the house — a destination, not hidden. Keep the Japanese maple at least 2m from major trees and hedges.
Bulb plan
Bulbs give the highest impact per pound — the plan suggests doubling the narcissus and alliums if budget allows.
The build — phase by phase
The order that keeps mistakes cheap: mark it out and live with it before a single sod is lifted. Tick each task as you complete it.
Mark out & live with it
Beds & structure
Bench, supports & lighting
Bulb planting
Perennial planting
Lighting
Warm white only. Under-light rather than over-light — a few well-placed pools of light read as luxury.
Year-round interest
Something to notice in every month of the year.
Budget & risks
Estimated total
Includes plants, bench, lighting, compost, mulch, bulbs and gravel. Excludes professional labour.
Watch-outs
Open decisions
A few things to settle once you've marked the garden out. Jot your decision next to each — it saves with everything else.