| I would suggest that the form of the maple does not funtion in a foundation planting without support of a complete base foundation planting. Finish the basic foundation planting first and then add to maple to it, in other words. The foundation planting blends the biggest element of your landscape (house) with the rest of your landscape. That has a huge effect on the "big picture". Once you do that, you can add funk to your planting with interesting forms such as the maple. If you don't do that, the look of the house will be incomplete or out of sync and will take away from the look of the landscape. Instead of thinking that specimens will be so powerful that it will take care of the composition, realize that a poor composition will over power the beauty of the plant. You'll neither have a good landscape or beautiful specimen. Put the maple to the side, lay out a foundation planting that ties the architecture to the land, and then figure how you can add the tree into the composition to enhance the overall look. If you can borrow a couple of feet from that driveway, it would allow you to plant slightly past the corner of the house. If you don't, you'll have a lot of visual bulk in front of the house. It is very difference in plant placement with a very large change in appearance of the way the house looks on the property. The paint on the steps is also a powerful visual that is not working very well. Also, if you could get some kind of white grate to make the vents more subtle it would help. I would suggest keeping the base foundation planting simple. Something upright and green on the corner, maybe two of the same shrub - one next to the landing, the other pushed forward between that and the corner plant, and a slightly smaller plant next to the step. I'd keep them as evergreens in this case. That will do the work of tying the house to the land. After that, you could add more plants with color, foliage color, different texture, and/or different form because the foundation base planting will have a strong unifying effect. Keep the maple outside of the window. You will want to add something in front of the corner plants because the visual weight of the steps with shrubs next to it will keep the middle bulky which would not be a good look on that narrow house. You'll need to bulk up the ends to make the front door the center of attention. That goes far in making a house welcoming. |