Centennial Park Paddington— Heritage Front Garden Design
Suburb reference: Centennial Park / Paddington area Year: 2024 Job type:Landscape design and plant installation — front garden bed
The streets around Centennial Park carry some of the most recognisable heritage streetscapes in Sydney — Federation homes with terracotta hexagonal tile paths and diamond-border entrance tiles.
Getting a front garden to sit comfortably within that context, while still feeling considered and contemporary, requires a deliberate approach to plant selection and palette.
This front garden bed had two established palms as its structural anchor and a dense groundcover of Boston Fern that had taken over completely. The ferns weren't performing badly — they were simply the wrong plant for what the client and the home deserved. The bed had no focal point, no seasonal interest, and no visual relationship with the freshly painted black boundary fence.
The soil beneath the ferns was root-dense from years of established growth but otherwise workable — no significant amendment was required before planting. The full bed was cleared, black dyed woodchip mulch was laid across the entire area creating an immediate visual reset, and sandstone rocks were positioned around the palm bases as grounding feature elements.
The planting palette was minimal and deliberate. A single Magnolia 'Little Gem' (Magnolia grandiflora 'Little Gem') was installed as the hero specimen — chosen for its compact upright form, glossy deep- green foliage with bronze undersides, and large white flowers that perform reliably in the dappled shade created by the existing palms. Tricolor Star Jasmine (Trachelospermum jasminoides 'Tricolor') was planted throughout as the understorey groundcover — its variegated cream, green and pink foliage providing year-round colour and texture without competing with the Magnolia. The result is a front garden that reads as both heritage-appropriate and genuinely contemporary — a considered palette that suits the tiles, the palms, and the street it sits on.