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Garden design costs

33 replies

MrsCampbellBlack · 22/09/2016 11:55

This may well be a 'how long is a piece of string' question but any ideas/experience as to how much it would cost to get garden designs done? Our plot is one third of an acre.

We're in the middle of a house renovation and won't want to do the actual landscaping until next summer but would be good to have designs for garden done soon from an overall design/build perspective.

Thanks!

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shovetheholly · 22/09/2016 12:16

This is a difficult question because often you're not just paying for the designer's time but project management and materials and labour as well. All of the 'execution' costs will depend radically on how complicated your design is and how expensive the materials are.

Obviously, if you will be doing some of that work yourself it falls.

I would think you are looking at £2-3k for stuff from initial consultation to detailed design drawings (and that would be at a fairly cheap rate an hour) and about 10% of the overall budget cost for management. The cost of the garden itself - probably £20k if you pay others to do it.

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MrsCampbellBlack · 22/09/2016 13:10

Thanks Shove!

I was thinking around £20k overall and a couple of grand for designs. Golly, nothing is cheap that's for sure with house renovations.

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shovetheholly · 22/09/2016 13:26

Don't underestimate your own powers. You can do a LOT yourselves if you have the time and inclination! Even hard landscaping is (mostly) not that hard to do.

Also, think about maintenance costs, because these will vary wildly depending on what you choose. A fine herbaceous perennial border requires a LOT of fussing.

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MrsCampbellBlack · 22/09/2016 13:32

I don't really have the time or inclination to be honest. I want a very low maintenance garden really - already have a gardener but I need someone with vision to do the designs.

I guess as with everything - local recommendations will be the way to go Smile

I do have a lovely pinterest board about gardens - if only I could make that into reality for free Wink

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AMR123456 · 22/09/2016 13:40

We had 3 quotes done for landscaping. This was for new drive & levelling of our back garden. We thought it would be around the £20,000 mark. The 1st came in at a jaw dropping £43,000!! The 2nd £25,000 ( who suggested a different way of doing it thus involving less work) & the 3rd was £33,000. All we feel too expensive. We will have renovated the inside of our house for that!!

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MrsCampbellBlack · 22/09/2016 14:32

Lordy!

Am spending crazy amounts on extension and total house renovation so really want to spend no more than £20k on garden. However will need driveway doing and had hoped to replace large shed with home office type thing within that budget. Suspect that is ambitious though.

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shovetheholly · 22/09/2016 14:49

I think it might be, sadly Sad. It really does depend on what you want from the garden, though. Have an initial consultation with a designer and mention the budget and see what they suggest.

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VanillaSugarandChristmasSpice · 23/09/2016 21:48

Our garden is 40ft long and 20ft wide. We wanted it landscaped for £10k but that's not enough, apparently 😨

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shovetheholly · 24/09/2016 09:43

It is an expensive business. When you are having landscaping done this way, you are often paying for pretty skilled tradespeople and pretty high end materials (stone etc), and you're also often buying established plants which is far more expensive.

To reduce cost, you can do an awful lot of the work yourself, picking and choosing where you need additional help. You can also buy cheaper plants.

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MrsCampbellBlack · 24/09/2016 11:57

I have spent this morning googling resin bonded gravel drives. I used to spend my time googling chanel handbags Wink

Have got one landscape designer who is going to come back to me with some costs - at this point I just really want designs in case what we do with the garden has any implications for my house renovation. I have a feeling that I am going to have to get interested in gardening Wink

Our garden is pretty established so can't imagine I would need a lot of digging/stonework but who knows.

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shovetheholly · 24/09/2016 14:40

mrscampbell - I think the question of how a renovated/extended house relates to the garden is one that is overlooked by a LOT of architects. You see a lot of builds where the interior space is wonderful, but from the outside, they just look totally 'plonked'.

I am having a hell of a job getting mine to engage with it as a question - they are really, really good and talented people, but it's just clearly way outside their comfort zone, and not a way they seem to be trained to think. I do think it will pay dividends for you to get more involved, for this reason.

One example: I am having a green roof as part of my build and I simply cannot get the architects to understand that plants that will thrive in a sunny site in the south of England will not do well on a north-facing roof in Sheffield, and that some very, very specific things are going to be needed to cope with cold, dryness AND shade. Despite the fact that I have explained this in several different ways, they persist in showing me pictures of green roofs with completely unsuitable plants. If I weren't involved, I could well have been sold hundreds of quids worth of plants that would just die (I will probably grow my roof myself in my greenhouse!). This is why a garden designer who knows plants is really useful.

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Kr1stina · 25/09/2016 05:18

I think you are over budgeting for design costs and seriously under budgeting for build costs .

Stylish AND very low maintenance needs excellent design, top quality hard landscaping and expert installation, lighting and large evergreen structural plants . You are probably looking at £100/m2.

Can you link to your Pinterest so we can see what you are looking for ?

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GardenGeek · 25/09/2016 13:52

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Message withdrawn at poster's request.

MrsCampbellBlack · 25/09/2016 13:58

Thank you for further responses.

When I say easy to maintain - I have a gardener who will come once a week for four hours but I will not be out in the garden for hours everyday like my mil.

I had just totally forgotten to really take garden/driveway into account really in overall budget so it will have to be done at the back end of next year I think.

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evelynj · 25/09/2016 14:01

We had a great designer to come & look, discuss & draw to scale designs for £350 I think about 2 years ago. Our plot is split level so awkward but he had some fab ideas. His drawings alone have been so helpful, I got a couple of copies made & doodled over them myself. Have adjusted some of his ideas but couldn't afford the £30k+ to do it all at once but have just finished patio & extended back garden to take in side garden for a play area so we don't have to see children's toys. Well worth the money for drawings-you might find your priorities change after a consultation

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evelynj · 25/09/2016 14:02

4 hours a week is loads for that size of plot! But then I'm a very lazy gardener :)

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GardenGeek · 25/09/2016 14:14

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MrsCampbellBlack · 25/09/2016 14:27

You are re-assuring me now. Mil has a beautiful garden but literally spends hours out there every day.

I like sitting in mine and looking at the view Wink

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Kr1stina · 25/09/2016 16:13

People like me ( and perhaps your MIL ) spend hours in the garden because we enjoy it. I have lots of plants that need tied in and dead headed and divided and and moved. You don't need any of that if you don't want to.

You can have a beautiful and stylish garden that can easily be managed in lees than 4 hours a week . One of the first questions any competent garden designer will ask is how much time will you spend on maintenance.

As a matter of interest, what does your gardener do for 4 hours a week at the moment ?

Can we have a link to Pinterest, or at least some photos of the style of garden you would like ? No such thing as too many garden photos....

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shovetheholly · 26/09/2016 08:12

gardengeek - that's really helpful, thank you! I am in the bowl, but high-ish up. The garden is very cool and very shaded/moist, especially in winter - so the plants will need to cope with a real range of conditions.

I am taking over responsibility for the green roof myself, I think. It's a challenge, but I want to do it as an experience. I won't be entirely on my own, though - DH has a few favours owing from the landscape dept here, and one of the guys literally wrote the book on green roofs, so I'll ask him to look through my planting list and check I'm not doing anything stupid. I want to use it to try more unusual plants to what most people normally grow on such roofs (not a fan of sedum mats), so it means a bit more research, talking to Hardy Plant Society, alpine people etc. And a bit of risk, because not everything will work!!

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atticusclaw2 · 26/09/2016 08:20

We had our last garden done for £12k. It was a third of an acre (but this was six years ago)

This included - large hardwood decking area 4m square.
large 2m x 4m pond surrounded by decking boards.
gravelled paths
french oak raised beds
lawn lifted and relaid.

It didn't include plants which we did gradually over the course of the next year. I did the design but we had quotes of about £1,000-£2,000.

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Suzietwo · 26/09/2016 08:27

I've just had part of my garden designed and done. The area is smaller than 1/3 acre but the design covered the entire plot which is an acre. It cost around 1.5k for the design which is bloody brilliant.then the job was done for 16500 BUT that didn't include planting (2k?) and I think he under budgeted. There's a lot of timber and new paving so expensive. I totally love it and am really happy I did it.
Like you it was part of a house project which was much larger. I budgeted 20k for entire acre so this was obv over budget but easy to breakdown as areas are divided by a wall. I'll come back to the other bit when I have more money.
If you're after a designer recommendation (south east) let me know.
4 hours once a week is masses btw.

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ClarkL · 26/09/2016 18:06

I think it really varies with the gardener, we have a gardener who does odd jobs, a person who regularly comes and cuts the grass and another who does the lawn fertiliser thingy 4 times a year and I can easily loose myself in the garden for hours, dont get me started on raking the leaves at this time of year either...
4 hours if it includes hedge care and grass cutting probably doesn't leave much spare time

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GardenGeek · 27/09/2016 02:02

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shovetheholly · 27/09/2016 08:40

Thanks gardengeek - I will try to do a thread! Am thinking of doing a bit of a blog about it as well, since there doesn't seem to be one about a really shaded green roof in the north of England.

I am looking at making seslaria autumnalis a bit of a feature through it. I just love its form when planted in groups. It sounds pretty difficult to get going from seed, so I think I'm going to buy a big healthy bush of a plant and massacre it into lots of small pieces to grow on in the greenhouse over winter.

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