Garden Design

Small-scale sustainable home and garden design | Garden Design and Inspiration | Gardening Australia



Costa visits a sustainable house and garden, designed to make efficient use of every space. Subscribe 🔔 http://ab.co/GA-subscribe
Mike and his partner bought an unrenovated house on a leafy Mt Colah street 10 years ago. Their garden starts on the verge with edibles, and the front yard is a thriving ‘no dig’ food forest. There’s another obvious sign that there’s something interesting going on here – a community swap stall with seeds, plants and books all enclosed in a big, old red phone box.

Mike says he’s met more of my neighbours in the last month, than in seven years!

Mike’s aim is to improve livability while caring for the planet. Mike renovated the original house to increase its energy efficiency, with solar water and solar electricity. He’s built a hardwood pergola down the west side of the house which hosts a grapevine that shades the house in summer. It’s the first of many clever structural innovations he has installed in his garden using mostly recycled materials.

Compost System:
The three-bay compost system is built from recycled roof sheets and brick pallets. Liquid from the back of the bays runs and into a well-positioned bucket. Like all the compost, this liquid is then diluted and used on the garden.

Chook House:
The chook house is palatial and has been built using leftovers from the renovation. It’s both vermin and fox proof, and he used the old front door as the human entrance.

Irrigation:
Rainwater is captured across the site, stored and cleverly distributed. Mike has four tanks positioned around the garden that collectively hold 27,000 litres of water. The garden is irrigated via overhead driplines and tank overflows are redirected to garden beds. Storm water from the driveway is redirected into a set of pipes that are re-directed into the garden.

The entire back lawn was dug up to create swales (a series of contoured ditches) designed to slow down water flow and hold it in the soil.

There’s was a rocky outcrop in the backyard where water naturally collected into a pond. Mike has since bricked in the pond, added a bathtub for an outdoor pool for the kids and then found a bathroom basin which he turned into a bird bath.

Wicking Beds:
Mike has made wicking beds from second hand bulk containers. One is used as a liquid fertiliser brewer and the other four have been chopped in half to make 8 wicking beds. The sides of the wicking beds are protected from the sun with recycled zinc aluminium panels take from a roof. The wicking beds are placed in an ‘exclusion zone’, that has been covered with netting to prevent fruit fly, possums and rats making off with the produce.

For Mike, the journey of the garden is infinitely more important than the destination. He’s learnt a lot on the way and is keen to keep learning. It’s inspiring to see what can be achieved in such a short space of time and what will follow, as Mike’s sustainable gardening journey continues to grow.

Featured Plants:
SYDNEY GREEN WATTLE – Acacia decurrens *
THYME – Thymus vulgaris cv.
PINEAPPLE SAGE – Salvia elegans
SILVERBEET – Beta vulgaris cv.
PEACH ‘FLORDAGOLD’ – Prunus persica cv.
QUINCE – Cydonia oblonga cv.
BASIL ‘PERENNIAL’ – Ocimum cv.
FENNEL – Foeniculum vulgare cv. *
* Check before planting: this may be an environmental weed in your area

Filmed on Dharug Country | Mount Colah, NSW
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17 Comments

  1. Top job mate, imagination is going to save our world. I wish you all the best for your part of our future. Well done.

  2. These videos are getting quite repetitive.

    Guy who owns his house (does gardening Australia understand* we're in a housing affordability crisis?) had the money to do significant renovations to his house and then reused a small portion of the scrap from said renovation in the garden (the rest was carted off site, much of it into landfill) which is presented as if he's some kind of an eco warrior for doing so.

    The existing garden was dug up with diesel machines like dingos, bobcats or excavators. Some plants were put in. Round of applause, end of episode. Despite the mountain of cash required to achieve what was just presented the episode keeps making reference to doing it cheaply.

    Would be great to see some more diversity in the content, and in the gardener's shown (they're almost always white). Given the housing affordability crisis that is fast becoming an election issue, with a large section of Australia locked out of the housing market it would probably be great to see a regular focus in the content towards gardens that are rental friendly too.

    Given the average block for an owner occupier is now 700m2 with the house on top, it would be desirable if there was a lot less content from gardening Australia showing the old Australian 1/4 acre block.

    More native gardens, particularly native edibles, with more first nations people would be fabulous.

    It would also be great if you could stop green washing activities that are anything but. Reduce, reuse, recycle are in that order for a reason. And while we're on that, reusing something is very different from recycling it.

  3. I was a Concretor and welder and I have paralysis for the last 3 and half years and now can finally get outside and start doing things in spirts and been working on pot plant garden as I am in a rental. Some advice of what plants I could put around the place would be great. I already have about 120 veggies and flowers. It’s my friends place who I care for until I fell ill myself but still her as well as she helps me now.

    I grew up on 20 acres and around farms and I’m finding it hard to organise myself on such a small plot

  4. Cringes at the to be brassica weeds on the verge. Responsible gardening needs to be a focus too. Invasives should be contained or avoided. Caster oil trees are the worst too, but thankfully I didn't see that.

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