





This property in Wayzata had a sloped front yard that needed real structure — and once the bones were in place, what went into the beds mattered just as much.
The spacing between the boulders was deliberate, leaving room for ornamental grasses and ground cover plantings to fill in over time. These aren't filler plants — they're doing visual work, softening the stone and giving the beds a layered look as the seasons change.
There's also drip irrigation line running through the bed — keeping new plantings established without relying on the homeowner to hand-water all season. That's a detail that pays off every single year.
Around the side of the house, the adjacent beds were topped with fresh dark mulch. Dark mulch does two things: it holds moisture so new plants can establish, and it creates contrast that makes everything planted look more intentional from the street.
The whole planting scheme follows one rule — low-maintenance selections that fit the wooded, lakeside character of the neighborhood. Nothing exotic, nothing that fights the climate. Just the right plants in the right place, supported by a bed that's built to last.