02/13/2026
“Low-maintenance” is one of the most common requests we hear from new site design clients. But what does “low-maintenance” actually mean?
In our latest blog post, Rachel Lindsay reflects on a six-year experiment in a small, street-side garden planted with mostly native, drought-tolerant species. Once established, the space requires only a few hours of care per year—but that care depends on plant knowledge, timing, and a willingness to let the landscape evolve.
The post also explores why maintenance can’t be measured on a single axis. Time is only part of the equation. So are skill, tools, seasonality, and even personal preference.
If you work in landscape design, planning, or maintenance, this is a useful reframing of how we talk about care.
Read the full post:
https://www.regenerativedesigngroup.com/myth-low-maintenance-landscape/
[ : Tall purple flower spikes rise from a lush street-side planting, with a butterfly perched on one stem. A red house with cream trim sits softly in the background.]
In the survey we send to all new and prospective clients, one of the most frequently requested goals is a “low-maintenance landscape.” If all time spent tending a landscape were equal, that might be something we could quantify. But it isn’t. High and low are simply not very good descriptions f...