The Mercury News

Forget all the setbacks; a backyard transforma­tion is worth it

- Barni Jamekon At home

Despite evidence that would suggest otherwise, constructi­on projects do end. Witness my new backyard.

I have opened a bottle of Prosecco, and my husband and I are toasting our new yard with our landscape designer Tony Evans, who spearheade­d the sixmonth landscapin­g odyssey. Evans is dashing around the yard taking pictures.

“What’s your favorite part of the job?” I ask dashing alongside him.

“This!” he says without hesitation, and throws open his arms. “Mine too!” I say. Transforma­tion never gets tiresome.

My husband and I first met Evans, owner of Orlando Landscape Design, last December, when we invited him over to help us reimagine our unremarkab­le backyard, a forsaken, overgrown, downtrodde­n plot of earth.

A month later he presented a virtual rendering of what our yard could be and flew us around it with his mouse. The avatar yard maximized the view and minimized the neighbors. It featured three outdoor rooms — a living room, dining area, and hearth room with a fire pit and a fountain. We were sold. We kicked off the project March 1.

Since then, I’ve learned that landscapin­g projects are like pregnancy. Once that baby arrives, you forget the nausea and heartburn, because the reward is so worth it.

Now I can hardly remember the tree remover who didn’t grind the stumps low enough to literally make the grade. I can barely recall the day when the wall fountain — which needed to go in before anything else and which took nine weeks to arrive — couldn’t be installed because the Bobcat that was supposed to carry the fountain into the yard couldn’t drive over the 4-footdeep, 2-foot-wide trench the gas-line contractor had dug to bury the gas line. Which couldn’t be filled in until the gas line passed inspection. Which couldn’t happen until we could get an inspector, which was difficult because of the pandemic’s stay-at-home orders.

And I have only a dim recollecti­on of the cement fire bowl that arrived cracked, and the monthlong wait for its replacemen­t, and of the 3,000 pounds of black Mexican beach rocks coming to Florida, for reasons no one could explain, from Idaho.

(Anyone out there who thinks I get preferenti­al treatment from contractor­s because I write a home design column, think again.)

“It’s the little foxes that spoil the vineyards,” Evans said, paraphrasi­ng a Bible verse, meaning it’s all the stupid nuisances that get you. Evans is a former youth pastor, a skill set he needed to draw on to work with me.

Indeed, our project relied on six or seven industries to pull together. A lot could go wrong.

But never mind all that. My backyard is now my favorite place to be. When I am away, I think about coming home and being there. When I am there, I feel as if I’m on vacation, which is good, because after what we spent on it, we can’t afford a vacation.

“You were locked on your patio,” Evans said, looking back to when we started. “Nothing about your yard made you want to step into it. Now you have a whole new living area.”

If landscape architectu­re is the art of turning an uninviting space into a place you want to enter, then mission accomplish­ed. Here’s what I learned:

PAY MOR A eisinn >> Hire someone trained in the field of landscape architectu­re. We could have easily spent as much money without a vision and not had nearly as satisfying a result. A landscape designer knows how to employ scale, proportion, texture, balance, function and aesthetics. Although profession­als in related trades — like nurseries, lawn service, pool companies or paving companies — may offer to design your landscape for free, or for a small charge, they will be slanted toward their trade. Avoid the conflict.

ASK WOAT’S Inalueie ANE WOAT ISN’T, ANE MUEnit AAAOREINNL­Y >> Our landscape proposal covered demolition, grading, patio travertine, beach rock, plant materials, mulch, the irrigation system, labor and oversight. Everything else we paid for directly. The fire bowls, the gas lines to fuel them and the installati­on, the fountain, the furniture, the fencing, lighting, planter pots and outdoor cushions added up.

UNEIRSTANE Toi mii STRUATURI >> Most landscape designers charge a flat design fee, often less than 10% of the total project cost. Then owners can either do the work themselves, hire their own contractor­s to do the work, or have the designer oversee the project for an additional percentage. We had Evans quarterbac­k the project, because he had crews he worked with and knew how to sequence the job.

Mi PATIINT >> Projects need to move forward sequential­ly. Problems at any step can delay the whole job.

ixpiat OIAAUPS >> To borrow from Shakespear­e, just like true love, the course of home renovation never did run smooth. But all’s well that ends well. And that’s all that matters.

Syndicated columnist Marni Jameson is the author of five home and lifestyle books, including “Downsizing the Family Home What to Save, What to Let Go” and “Downsizing the Blended Home — When Two Households Become One.” You may reach her at marnijames­on.com.

 ?? COURTESY OF TONY EVANS ?? The new backyard has three inviting spaces — a living room, a dining area and a hearth room with chairs around a fire bowl, greatly expanding the home’s usable space.
COURTESY OF TONY EVANS The new backyard has three inviting spaces — a living room, a dining area and a hearth room with chairs around a fire bowl, greatly expanding the home’s usable space.
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