A Perfect Family Garden In Camberwell

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Over-cooked. It’s a word landscape designer Ian Barker tells me he ends up using often. It’s not a description I often associate with the design of gardens but I love it – it says a lot. There’s little worse than over-cooked design (or cake, for that matter). This garden, surrounding a gorgeous old home in the Melbourne suburb of Camberwell, is, according to Ian, baked to perfection.

Ian and his team at Ian Barker Gardens were engaged by the owners of the property in 2015 to design and build a garden for their large family in 2015. Responding to new additions to this gorgeous old home by architects Herbert and Howes, the garden’s lines are simple and elegant. ‘We really toned down the garden,’ Ian says. ‘It’s restrained, yet it has a huge impact.’ Part of the success of the garden, according to Ian, is its relationship with the architecture. ‘Without the backdrop of the pavilion, the garden wouldn’t look anywhere near as good as it does today’, he says.

At the front of the property, the garden is relatively formal, echoing the balance and symmetry of the home’s façade, with clipped box hedges and two pyramid box topiaries framing the front door. ‘Once you get away from the front entrance, the garden gets quite wild’, Ian says. There’s the children’s play area, a woodland garden, a formal lawn framed by grass gardens and more. The clients have four children and according to Ian, ‘The garden was designed for kids to run through. They run through the woodland, through the door linking the old and new elements of the property, and out onto the lawn at the back.’

The loose planting was very much encouraged by Ian’s clients. Whilst the simple lines of the space, and the connection between the architecture, old and new, were important to Ian and his team, his client wanted wild. ‘Our client said, “the wilder the better”.’

Wild in this garden means loose, atmospheric planting combinations of grasses like Calamagrostis ‘Karl Foerster’, Poa ‘Eskdale’ and Miscanthus ‘Klein Fontaine’. It also means seasonality – something that these lush and full images don’t quite capture. In winter, Ian’s team cut back the perennials, and grassy plantings are chopped hard to the ground. ‘All you see is dirt. Our clients wholeheartedly accept this. I can’t stress enough how wonderful the clients are. They’re extraordinarily trusting.’

A canopy of mature trees and a great balance between hard landscaping and lush planting lends a sense of depth and timelessness to this garden. It doesn’t look it, but it’s actually only two years old! It is a garden that, like the house it surrounds, is destined to get better with age. ‘We’re not fussed about trends, we’re not driven by that,’ Ian says. ‘The garden design has to suit the house. It has to be a good marriage. Once we get that right, we try hard to soften it. We’ll put green in wherever we can. So, our gardens just get better and better over the years.’ And this garden, according to Ian, is pretty darn special. ‘I think this is one of our best.’

Lush, perennial planting augments an enticing and beautiful family garden. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


A mix of textural grassy planting including Calamagrostis ‘Karl Foerster’, Poa ‘Eskdale’ and Miscanthus ‘Klein Fontaine’) separates the lawn and tennis court areas. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


Lush, perennial planting augments an enticing and beautiful family garden. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


The sculptural form of the crepe myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica) contrasts beautifully with the fine, textural grasses in this Camberwell garden. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


The sculptural steel gateway defines the transition between the front, more formal garden, and the wilder rear garden. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


An outdoor pavilion designed by Herbert and Howes connects seamlessly with the lush garden designed by Ian Barker Gardens. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


‘The garden was designed for kids to run through,’ Ian Barker says. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


Full, flowery and romantic planting in the front garden borders includes Helenium ‘Mahogany’, Aster x frikartii Monc, Rudbeckia cvs. and Iris germanica ‘Saturn’. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


Full, flowery and romantic planting in the front garden borders. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


Bluestone stepping stones engulfed by Viola hederaceae. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


A pink flowering crepe myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica). Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.


A raised, wet-edge pool is separated from the tennis court with a retractable net – a neat use of space. Photo – Claire Takacs, courtesy of Ian Barker Gardens.

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