Welcome!

Thanks for visting Simply The Nest. I'm an English girl married to an Portuguese boy, and when I'm not taking care of our adorable baby girl, I blog about our house renovation, DIY projects, delicious recipes, design, inspirational interiors, and  family life in a little Manchester nest. Oh, and Jack Russells (we have two). And our five year masterplan to move to France. Très bien.

Tour Our Nest
Twitter Me

Psst! You can also use this logo if you wanna link to me...

Search Me
Favourite Reads

  

  

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

« I'm Loving It - 1965 Edition Of Brides Magazine | Main | Our Garden Design »
Monday
Mar012010

Planning Our New Front Garden

So far since moving into our Nest, Andre and I have renovated the kitchen, the bathroom, the garden, laid new laminate flooring, and decorated throughout. The only big project we haven't tackled yet is the front garden - which is currently a hideous mess of concrete slabs, mud, patchy grass and overgrown hawthorn. Yummy.

So the plan is we're going to install a new paved driveway, a new picket-style wooden fence, and some wooden arches along the side of the house that we can train evergreen clematis and sweet peas to grow up in order to soften the overall look (to mirror the effect of our pergola/gazebo-type structure in the back garden):

This has led to some fairly hilarious discussions with Manchester city council. Me: "We're thinking of installing a trellis-style fence". The council: "Well, that doesn't sound very nice". Um, OK then. We've eventually compromised on a picket-style fence which fulfills the council's requirement to be see-through (apparently so we can't hide people in our garden) and my requirement to not cost so much money that we have to re-mortgage the house to afford it.

I'm planning to order the paving from a company called Simply Paving whom we have used previously to order our Stone Circle of Servitude Fortitude. Here are the options I'm considering so far:

Which do you like? All three options have different price ranges, with the most expensive option being twice the price of the least expensive option. Can you tell which is which? Go on, tell me you think the least expensive option (ie the one we're probably going to choose) is the most expensive one. I would LOVE that :-)

I've also placed an ad on Rated People to find a contractor to do all the heavy lifting, digging, and individual sett laying (Alice and Andre in 'actually hiring someone else to do the work' shocker) - I have no clue whether the going rate for this kind of work will be merely eyebrow-raising or full-on heart-attack-inducing, so watch this space - we may well end up doing everything ourselves as usual...

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (3)

I think a border is necessary otherwise it may look like a big pile of bricks. I like the various natural tones, some dark some light, in the first 2 pics.

Would you never go the way of herringbone?

Hey, I like the last 2 pics most. I think that looks great with the house, wooden fence and some (mediterranean) plants. Do they have various sizes, too? Assuming the first two pics are most expensive, so (luckily) my choice is good for your budget.

March 6, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterGordon

Gordo! Yep, the last picture is el cheapo option. I so can't bring myself to spend £40 per sq metre on paving slabs. We're planning to put a gate across the front of the house as well so Enrique and Penny will be able to run free in the front garden at last!

Lydia - for some reason I'm not fond of herringbone. I spent a little time considering why, and realised I don't have any diagonal patterns in the house at all - I think I don't find them very relaxing on the eye - a bit too Bridget Riley, perhaps? I like the idea of creating more of a cobble-stone effect, which matches Victorian Manchester pretty well, I think. Yes, it will have a border so it looks nice and tidy. The contractor came round on Friday so I'm just waiting for the quote...

March 8, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterSimply The Nest

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>