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Front gardens are often overlooked, covered in tarmac for cars or swathed in paving for minimal maintenance. Yet these small spaces provide invaluable potential for extra planting, particularly in towns and cities, helping to reduce pollution, increase biodiversity and provide habitats for wildlife. The most important first step in any front garden is to ensure that your hard surfaces are permeable.
Flooding is becoming an increasing problem as weather events become more extreme with global warming, and rainwater needs somewhere to go, so the more permeable surfaces and flower beds you can have in your garden the better. Plan a gravel driveway that you can soften round the edges with self-seeding plants such as poppies, fennel or valerian, or choose permeable block paving from a company such as Marshalls with space for flower beds all around. Any area of mixed planting will also improve the soil underneath, acting like a sponge to soak up run-off after heavy rain.
In terms of planting, choose tough, low maintenance plants that will give as much seasonal interest as possible. Plan a simple layout to give continuity, starting with structural shrubs. Frame a path or front door with yew spheres or a low hedge of lavender, and then infill with colourful seasonal planting: tulips and honesty for spring, geums and salvias for summer, and Japanese anemones for autumn. Add a low-growing grass such as Stipa tenuissima or Anemanthele lessoniana, and a climbing wisteria (or Hydrangea petiolaris for a north-facing facade), and you already have a scheme that will transform the front of your house.
If you have more space, choose a small tree or shrub such as Magnolia stellata as a centrepiece, perhaps surrounded by a parterre of Euonymus japonicus (a good alternative to the more problematic Buxus sempervirens). Instead of fences for your boundaries, consider planting a hedge which will further boost biodiversity. Hawthorn, beech and are particularly good for wildlife, or even better, a mixed native hedge that will provide shelter and food for insects, birds and small mammals.
As well as improving your own views out of your house, your front garden is on view to everyone who passes by. Plant-filled front gardens provide an opportunity to bring colour, health and happiness into a neighbourhood and if you take the first step to transform yours, you might find all your neighbours following suit.
For structure
For seasonal flowers
Grasses
This originally appeared on House & Garden UK | Clare Foster.
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