Modern Surrey country garden

At first glance, this looked like an ordinary field ready for a garden. It wasn't. Beneath the thin layer of turf lay the old stock holding yard of what had once been a working dairy — concrete drains and channels that surfaced, unwelcome, as soon as the build got underway, turning straightforward groundwork into extensive excavation before a single plant went in.

It was worth it. Out of that unpromising start came the client's dream of a modern country garden built on sweeping, curvilinear lines, with massed perennials that established quickly into the generous, prairie-inspired drifts of echinacea, rudbeckia and grasses that now define the garden through summer and into autumn.

In the meantime, a line of tall grasses gave the garden privacy from passing dog-walkers while the native hedge along the boundary grew in to take over that job properly — part of a wider principle at work throughout the design: hide the boundaries, and the eye drifts on to the borrowed landscape beyond, making the garden feel considerably larger than its fence lines suggest.

Previous
Previous

Raynes Park terraced garden

Next
Next

A country garden in London