Ditch the Lawn — Rock Your Front Yard
A front-yard rock garden delivers year-round curb appeal with zero mowing, minimal watering, and maximum visual impact.
Why it works
Front-yard rock gardens solve the two biggest lawn complaints — maintenance and water usage — while dramatically improving curb appeal. A well-designed rock garden reads as intentional and artistic, signaling that the homeowner has invested in thoughtful design rather than defaulting to turf. In drought-prone regions, rock gardens comply with water restrictions while looking better than brown, dormant lawns. The strong structural forms of boulders and evergreen alpines hold interest in every season, including winter when neighboring lawns look bare.
How to achieve this look
Remove existing turf and install landscape fabric topped with 4 inches of decorative gravel in a warm tan or grey tone that complements your home. Position 3–7 boulders in asymmetric groupings along sight lines from the street and front door. Plant low, spreading alpines (creeping phlox, ice plant, sedum) around stone bases, add vertical accents with dwarf ornamental grasses or yucca, and include a specimen plant (dwarf Japanese maple, ornamental agave) as a focal point. Edge the bed crisply against the driveway and walkway with steel or stone edging. Add solar path lights to highlight boulders at night.
Arden shows you exactly how boulders, gravel, and alpine planting will look against your home facade. Compare warm and cool gravel tones, test boulder placement, and find the design that maximizes curb appeal before ordering materials.
"Saved thousands on landscaping fees. The AI suggestions matched my climate zone perfectly."
-- James R.
Häufige Fragen
Q1 Will a rock garden look good from the street?
Yes — if designed with clear focal points and varied heights. The key is scale: large boulders and bold plantings read well from a distance, while tiny alpine details reward close-up viewing near the path.
Q2 Do rock gardens lower property value?
No. Well-designed rock gardens often increase value, especially in drought-prone areas where they signal low maintenance and water independence. The key is professional-looking execution with quality materials.
Q3 How do I handle weeds in a rock garden?
Landscape fabric under gravel blocks most weeds. Any that appear in gravel are easily pulled. Dense alpine planting in growing pockets out-competes weeds naturally over time.