Island Life Magazine Ltd April/May 2006 | Page 44

GARDENING Landscaping driveways for curb appeal Nothing is less inviting than a bare concrete driveway as an entrance to your property. With the need to accommodate more cars than ever, the nation’s front gardens are fast becoming ugly old parking spaces. But you can do better than that, even in a small space. The entrance to your driveway is also the entrance to your home as a whole. How your driveway entrance is landscaped sets the tone for the viewer’s perception of your home. This is especially so when a property is bordered by a fence or wall, which focuses even more attention on a boring driveway. Driveways are a necessity in front gardens but they do have a tendency to dominate the area. Without some added areas of interest, a driveway exists as a purely functional scar running up and down your front garden. Landscaping with a little creativity can bring some much needed curb appeal. Landscaping driveways can consist of both hardscape and softscape. Hardscape options consist of walls and fences, while your softscape options include flower beds, ground covers, ornamental trees and shrubs space allowing. With a little imagination, you can make your driveway an attractive front garden feature rather than an eyesore. both. Just accenting the entrance can certainly be cheaper, which is important if your budget is small and your driveway large. Accenting the entrance to your driveway adds depth to your front garden. It interrupts a viewer’s gaze from looking directly at the house. While you can use softscape to do this, consider the possibility of theft or vandalism of planting areas close to the street. Shrubs planted too close to the side of the road have been known to disappear or be trampled all over during the night. A sensible choice would be both a combination of hardscape to clearly define your garden boundary with shrub planting tucked safely behind the wall or fence. The possibilities for landscaping driveways are greatly enhanced if you plan on including walls. This sets a backdrop for pots, shrubs and flower borders. Hardscaping can either parallel the driveway along its whole length or meet the driveway at the opening to the road, perhaps with a gated entrance. As with any design feature, you should be thinking about where you would like a viewer’s gaze to be drawn. This involves choosing a feature of your property to emphasise or, indeed, disguise. Decide whether the purpose of the landscaping is to accent the entrance of the driveway, run the length of the driveway or An effective budget choice is to plant beds of colourful annuals along the sides, which will draw the viewer’s gaze to the final 44 destination of your driveway. If that destination is a rather ordinary looking garage that is in plain view from the street, then drawing attention to this is not the best idea. Likewise, if your property is already dominated by too many straight lines, then planting your driveway’s edges with straight flower beds may add to the severity. Another useful trick of the eye would be to complement an accented driveway entrance with an accented doorway to the house. By drawing the eye from the landscaping of the driveway entrance to the front door, the eye will bypass a boring old driveway. With two visual points of interest, viewer’s eyes will feel welcomed twice over. Block Paving Contractors: G.P Installations - 01983 617171 - 07831 513616 R.G Dixcey - 01983 526508 - 07814 005840 C.J Construction - 01983 401647 - 07899 930244 Landscape Gardners/Designers: Tony Ridd - 01983 740067 - 07966 292334 S P Landscaping - 01983 614573 - 07855 820556 Tim Brayford - 01983 551412 Island Life - www.islandlifemagazine.net