Gardens

A Sprawling Country Garden In The Southern Highlands

This country garden in East Kangaloon masterfully blends into the rolling hills of the Southern Highlands, New South Wales.

The 26-hectare property serves as a rural retreat for the Sydney-based owners, who engaged Secret Gardens with the task of re-establishing the completely overgrown landscape.

Now, their house is enveloped by a series of ‘garden rooms’, courtyard spaces, and flowering perennials.

Written
by
Christina Karras
|
Photography
by

Nicholas Watt⁠

The garden includes an open outdoor dining area and courtyard.

The large pergola will be covered in mauve flowering wisteria over time.

Compacted gravel was used extensively across the site for a relaxed look.

Stairs from the house lead to the sprawling backyard.

An elevated timber deck overlooks rolling hills.

Flowering perennials like gaura lindheimeri (butterfly bush) and Lavandula stoechas Avonview (Italian lavender) line the pathway.

A mix of ornamental grasses help blend the boundaries of the house into the broader landscape.

The kitchen garden.

The new areas were designed to work around the mature trees.

Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gracilimus’ (tall ornamental grass) creative movement when the wind blows.

A large driveway accommodates plenty of cars for when visitors come to stay.

The garden walls are made from local stone to complement the house.

The sprawling property spans 26 hectares.

Writer
Christina Karras
Photography

Nicholas Watt⁠

30th of August 2024
Landscape design
Landscape Construction
Location

East Kangaloon, NSW/Gundungurra
Tharawal Country

‘Some gardens have a certain magic that is hard to capture in photos or put into words,’ says Matt Cantwell, creative director of landscape studio Secret Gardens.

This is the case for one of his latest projects, located on a sprawling country in East Kangaloon.

‘The bird life is amazing,’ he says of the garden. ‘And though the wind can be strong at times, it creates a magnificent sound through the trees, adding drama through our planting. You know that you’re in the country and that you have left your city life behind.’

But it took more than a year for him and his team to create this idyllic setting.

‘Our brief encapsulated an area that was 4800 square metres, including the house, which is fenced to protect from livestock,’ Matt Cantwell says.

In addition to designing the gardens that surrounded the entire home, the team were tasked with creating a series of ‘garden rooms’ that unfold around the 26-hectare property.

They carefully selected materials to complement the serene location and enhance its rural atmosphere. Inspired by the house’s structure, local stone was used for the garden walling, as split stone pavers and cobblestones provide accents beside the driveway.

The new entrance to the home opens to an inviting ‘winter garden’ filled with perennials and grasses like Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gracilimus’ (tall ornamental grass), while a seating area is flanked by ornamental pear trees that will grow to provide summer shade.

On the western side of the home, there’s a gravel path that leads to a range of planted garden beds, and a spacious outdoor living area where a pergola and kitchen garden await. A large lawn area also allows for clear views of the undulating natural landscape.

‘It was important to take advantage of this backdrop, blurring the boundaries between the main garden and the surrounding mature trees and rolling hills,’ Matt adds.

This inspired the soft planting palette, combining flowering shrubs like gaura lindheimeri (butterfly bush), Lavandula stoechas Avonview (Italian lavender), and Euphorbia characias (Mediterranean spurge) with textural grasses that move beautifully in the wind.

Secret Gardens also carefully planted larger plants and trees like Acer palmatum (Japanese maple) and Acer rubrum (October glory) in spaces that would enhance — not obstruct — the sprawling vistas. Their fine leaves will also provide contrasting colour throughout the seasons, transforming from green to fiery reds, oranges, and crimsons.

Matt says this considered ‘less is more’ is what encourages you to wander throughout the classic country garden, which is ‘even better in person’.

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