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Local Design · Hyattsville

Native garden design for Hyattsville, MD.

Hyattsville covers a lot of different yards — the Arts District infill, the older homes up in Hyattsville Hills, the older blocks west of Route 1. Here's how I think about designing across them.

Hyattsville is actually several places

The Arts District (along Route 1). Newer construction, smaller lots, younger trees. Sunnier conditions than the older parts of town, and often newer soil that was trucked in during construction. Great for sun-loving native perennial gardens — coneflower, milkweed, switchgrass, mountain mint — and for the kind of design that signals "intentional" to a creative-class neighborhood.

Hyattsville Hills (north/east of the city core). Older homes with more mature canopy, larger lots, more shade. Many yards inherited foundation plantings from 30+ years ago that have grown into hedges. The design moves here are usually about editing existing structure and adding a native ground-layer underneath.

West Hyattsville & Adelphi-adjacent blocks. Mixed older housing stock, varied lot sizes. Often the most variable conditions per block.

Plants suited to most Hyattsville yards

Common patterns in Hyattsville projects

Front-yard rebuilds on infill lots. New construction often arrives with a developer's "lawn + foundation shrubs" default. Replacing the lawn strip closest to the street with a layered native border transforms the curb impression immediately and reads as intentional in a way the original landscaping doesn't.

Editing the inherited foundation hedge. The older Hyattsville Hills yards often have decades-old hollies, boxwoods, and azaleas pushed against the house. The right move is rarely "rip it all out" — it's selective editing, top-dressing the soil, and inter-planting with companions to layer the bed.

Sun-loving meadow corners. Hyattsville has more genuine full-sun pockets than most of the DMV — particularly in the Arts District. A small meadow-style corner with native grasses and perennials looks dramatic, feeds wildlife, and needs almost no work after the first season.

If you just moved to Hyattsville: the previous owner's planting choices are worth a season of observation before you change much. Spring ephemerals, dormant grasses, and shrubs that bloom for only two weeks can be easy to misread as "weeds" or "dead" if you're not looking at the right time of year.

Curious about your Hyattsville yard?

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Related: Native plants for Maryland clay soil · Native plants for pollinators
Local design across

Hyattsville (20781, 20782, 20783) and the adjacent neighborhoods — including the Arts District, Hyattsville Hills, West Hyattsville, and the borders with University Park, Riverdale Park, and Mount Rainier.