Foodscaping That Doubles as Curb Appeal
An edible front yard proves that productive gardens can be gorgeous — harvest tomatoes, herbs, and berries from a landscape your neighbors envy.
Why it works
Front yards typically receive the most sun on a property, making them prime real estate for food production. Edible front yards blur the line between ornamental and productive — rainbow chard is as colorful as any annual flower, espaliered fruit trees create living walls, and herb borders perfume the walkway. A well-planned 200-square-foot edible bed can produce over 100 pounds of food per season.
How to achieve this look
Replace turf with raised beds framed in cedar or Corten steel, arranged in a geometric pattern visible from the street. Plant a dwarf fruit tree as the central focal point. Fill beds with a mix of edible and ornamental plants: purple basil next to marigolds, kale beside ornamental grasses, tomatoes on decorative obelisks. Edge beds with creeping thyme or strawberry runners as groundcover.
Upload a photo of your front yard and Arden renders it as an edible paradise — see where raised beds fit, how fruit trees frame your entrance, and which plant combinations create the most visual impact.
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Câu Hỏi Thường Gặp
Q1 Are front yard vegetable gardens legal?
Most jurisdictions allow them. Some HOAs restrict front-yard gardens, but many states have passed right-to-garden laws.
Q2 How do I keep an edible front yard looking tidy?
Use defined raised beds with clean edges, maintain mowed borders, install decorative supports for climbing plants, and interplant edibles with ornamentals.
Q3 Is front yard soil safe for growing food?
Test soil for lead and contaminants before planting directly. Raised beds with imported organic soil bypass any ground contamination concerns.