ᐅ Setting Priorities in Landscaping. Should the entire garden be planned at once?

Created on: 1 May 2018 19:20
R
R.Hotzenplotz
Hi!

We are slowly but surely preparing to get in touch with landscape gardeners – they said that once the ground floor shell is complete, it’s worth meeting on-site.

I’ve read that, based on experience, around 18% of the construction costs should be budgeted for exterior works and the garden. For us, that would be in the six-figure range. However, we only have about €50,000 (around $55,000) available to start with. So priorities will have to be set.

From your point of view, what are things that should definitely be considered and implemented from the beginning? What can maybe be planned for mentally but realized at a later stage?

So far, we have only made rough plans and want to ask 2-3 landscape gardeners for proposals.

Here’s what we have in mind so far:

Front garden:
- Driveway and path to the front door with large stone slabs
- Two small trees in the front garden, maybe a maple and another variety
- Lawn
- Possibly two strips of bark mulch to the left and right of the front door path with small mushroom-shaped trees

Garden:
- Terrace
- Mostly lawn, few flower beds
- Possibly a hedge at the sides of the property; a fence maybe later
- Due to the property’s topography, possibly stairs leading from the terrace down into the garden
- A kind of seating area at the far end of the property
- Possibly a spot elsewhere for our loungers with some of those yellowish grasses around them (I think they are called pampas grass)
- We are thinking of a green pergola – but we’re not sure yet if it should be on the terrace or at the seating area
- I dream of a large tree in the garden, but I haven’t researched that properly yet and haven’t found the final solution with just a quick online search; it probably requires professional advice
- In the longer term, a swimming pool or a hot tub could be an option (but we have no technical information on that yet).

I think it’s important to give landscape gardeners clear instructions from the start.

Would it make sense to have the entire final garden planned and then implement it step by step?

I’m looking forward to some tips on how to approach planning and prioritization, and on how to best communicate with the landscape gardener.

Top priority is of course the access path at the front and probably the whole front garden, so that we don’t start many things in different places but end up finishing nothing.
K
Kekse
2 May 2018 15:27
What the heck? 1000€/m²? With our not very large plot, that would come to an estimated 400,000–500,000 € (depending on what exactly counts as outdoor area). Just for the landscaping alone.
H
haydee
2 May 2018 15:42
Yep, the same happened to me. For us, almost nothing can be done without an excavator, retaining wall, earthworks, and so on.

We are also below that. It will still be a six-figure amount for about 1000 sq.m (10,764 sq.ft). However, this should provide reference values for other regions or flat plots as well. A small outdoor area naturally costs less than a large one.
K
Kekse
2 May 2018 15:47
Yes, but with (presumably low) six figures for 1,000 sqm (10,764 sq ft) you are not just below, but a whole order of magnitude below (otherwise you would be around one million). This rule of thumb is absurd.
K
Knallkörper
2 May 2018 16:15
It is as well. That is actually ten times the cost of average paving, all-inclusive.
H
haydee
2 May 2018 16:27
We are well below budget. However, the expensive part for us is the existing structure. The retaining wall made of sandstone is in good condition. There is no slope stabilization, no new retaining wall nearly 3 meters (10 feet) high, and no foundations that need to be broken up with a jackhammer. The existing plants can be preserved.
Without the existing structure, the plot would not have been financially viable for us to build on.

At least for plots like ours, the size must be significant if two people independently say the same thing.
S
Silent010
2 May 2018 16:53
R.Hotzenplotz schrieb:
We are both not gardeners and also people with two left hands.

If you want it done professionally, that’s no problem. Not feeling like doing it is okay, but having two left hands when it comes to garden design? No... anyone can do that.