Garden Design in Warrington
Garden landscaping, design and full garden transformations from one team. We plan the layout, pick the materials and build the whole thing ourselves. Around nine miles from our Leigh base.
Garden Design for Warrington Gardens
Garden design in north Warrington means designing around trees. Birchwood’s estates, Gorse Covert, Locking Stumps, Oakwood, were laid out as a planted new town in the 1970s, so plots come with mature tree belts, dappled shade and boundaries that are rarely a neat rectangle. A good design works with that: shade-tolerant planting, paving positioned to catch the light that does get in, and layouts that turn an awkward plot shape into a feature rather than a problem.
We cover Warrington and the surrounding area: Winwick, Callands, Orford, Longford, Cinnamon Brow and beyond (WA2, WA3, WA5).
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What’s Included
The older side of the patch asks different questions. Orford and Longford gardens tend to be long and narrow, which suits zoning, seating near the house, lawn in the middle, growing space at the bottom, while the village plots around Winwick have the room for bigger ideas like sweeping borders and screened seating areas. We design and build in-house, so the drawing you approve is the garden you get.
- Design and build by the same team, no third-party handoff
- Small terraced yards up to large family gardens
- Zoning for seating, lawn, play and planting areas
- Planting plans matched to your soil, light and maintenance level
- Honest material advice on paving, timber, gravel and turf
- One itemised quote covering the design and the full build
How It Works
Garden Design in Warrington, FAQs
Yes, plots against the tree belts in Gorse Covert, Locking Stumps and Oakwood are exactly the kind of design challenge we enjoy. Heavy shade and root spread rule out some options, but the right planting palette and hard landscaping choices turn a dark boundary into the best part of the garden.
That’s a common starting point on the Callands and Cinnamon Brow estates: original paths, tired shrub beds and a layout designed forty-odd years ago. We strip it back to a blank canvas where needed and redesign for how you actually use a garden now, bigger seating areas, lower maintenance, better flow from the house.
Yes. That’s how we work. The people who draw the plan are the people who build it, so the design is always practical, the price covers the real job, and there’s no gap between what you were promised and what gets built.
No, small gardens benefit most. In a tight yard every square metre has to do a job, so getting the layout right matters more, not less. A good design finds room for seating, storage and greenery in spaces people assume are hopeless.
Of course. If you’ve got mature trees, a decent shed or a patio that’s still sound, we’ll work them into the plan rather than rip everything out for the sake of it. Keeping what’s good usually saves money too.