Naturalistic landscape design in Jacksonville FL

Naturalistic Landscape Design in Jacksonville, FL

Jacksonville's diversity — from the oak-lined streets of San Marco to the salt marshes of the Intracoastal — calls for a design approach shaped by place, not formula. We bring that specificity to every neighborhood we serve.

A City of Distinct Neighborhoods

Jacksonville is the largest city by land area in the contiguous United States, and that scale creates a landscape design challenge unlike any other in Northeast Florida. A home in Riverside's historic district sits in a completely different microclimate, soil type, and architectural context than a property in Mandarin along the St. Johns River, or a beachside cottage in Atlantic Beach. There is no single "Jacksonville landscape" — there are dozens of them, each shaped by the specific conditions of its neighborhood.

That diversity is what draws us to working in Jacksonville. Our naturalistic design philosophy is not about imposing a single aesthetic on every property. It is about reading the site — understanding its soil, its light, its relationship to water and wind — and designing a landscape that feels inevitable in that specific place. A garden in San Marco should feel different from a garden in Nocatee, because the places themselves are fundamentally different.

Our studio in Fernandina Beach is approximately 35 to 45 minutes from most Jacksonville neighborhoods, depending on location. We serve clients across Duval County's urban core, the beaches, and the suburban south and west, though our strongest concentration of work is in the neighborhoods where homeowners value design-forward outdoor spaces: San Marco, Riverside, Avondale, Ortega, the Beaches, and Mandarin.

Landscape project in a Jacksonville neighborhood
Custom landscape design for a Jacksonville FL home

Neighborhood-Specific Design

Every Jacksonville neighborhood tells a different story. Our landscapes are written in the same language as the place itself.

San Marco & St. Nicholas

San Marco is Jacksonville's design-conscious epicenter — a walkable neighborhood of Mediterranean Revival, Tudor, and Colonial homes built primarily in the 1920s through 1950s. Lots are modest by suburban standards, which makes every square foot of landscape count. We design compact gardens that maximize seasonal interest within small footprints, using layered plantings, vertical elements like espalier and climbing jasmine, and hardscape courtyards that extend the living space outdoors. Materials lean toward brick, tabby, and aged stone that complement the neighborhood's architectural character.

Riverside & Avondale

These connected historic neighborhoods along the St. Johns River feature some of Jacksonville's most architecturally significant homes, from Craftsman bungalows to Prairie Style estates. Mature live oaks create a dense canopy that defines the streetscape but also limits sun exposure for many properties. We design shade-adapted landscapes using native ferns, camellia cultivars, cast iron plant, and other species that thrive in filtered light. Front gardens in these walkable neighborhoods serve as public-facing compositions that contribute to the neighborhood's aesthetic, and we design them with that communal visibility in mind.

Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach & Jax Beach

The beach communities bring the same coastal challenges we navigate on Amelia Island — salt spray, sandy soil, wind exposure — but in a more urban, higher-density context. Lots are typically narrower, side setbacks are tight, and the landscape must perform as both a privacy screen from neighbors and a functional outdoor space for the homeowner. We use salt-tolerant hedging, raised planting beds to improve soil quality in pure sand, and compact hardscape designs that create the feeling of a private courtyard within a 40-foot-wide lot. Outdoor showers, dune-inspired plantings, and weathered timber accents connect these gardens to the beach environment a few blocks away.

Mandarin & the Southside

Mandarin's neighborhoods along the St. Johns River feature some of Jacksonville's largest residential lots, with properties ranging from half an acre to several acres. The river influence creates a unique microclimate with higher humidity and more moderate temperatures than inland areas. These larger properties benefit from our naturalistic approach at its fullest expression — meandering paths through native understory plantings, specimen tree groves, rain gardens that manage stormwater from expansive roof areas, and outdoor gathering spaces positioned to capture river breezes and sunset views. The scale allows for the kind of immersive landscape experience that smaller lots cannot accommodate.

Designing Along the St. Johns River

The St. Johns River is Jacksonville's defining feature, and many of the city's most desirable properties sit along its banks or its tributaries. Waterfront landscape design in Jacksonville requires a different skill set than standard residential work. Bulkhead conditions, flood zone setbacks, riparian buffer requirements, and the St. Johns River Water Management District's permitting process all influence what can be built and planted.

We design riverfront landscapes that work within these regulatory frameworks while creating beautiful, functional outdoor spaces. Living shorelines — plantings of native spartina, juncus, and muhly grass along the water's edge — are increasingly preferred over hard armoring as they reduce erosion, filter runoff, and provide wildlife habitat. Elevated terraces and raised planting beds place outdoor living areas above normal flood levels without creating an imposing retaining wall.

The view is always the starting point for a riverfront design. We position seating, dining, and fire features to frame the best sightlines, use low-profile plantings along the water edge to avoid blocking the panorama, and place screening plants behind the living areas to create privacy from neighbors and the street. The result is a landscape that draws you toward the water while giving you a sense of enclosure and comfort.

Waterfront landscape design in Jacksonville FL
Naturalistic riverfront landscape design in Jacksonville FL

Jacksonville Landscaping FAQ

We serve clients across Jacksonville, but our work is concentrated in neighborhoods where homeowners value design-forward outdoor spaces. Our strongest presence is in San Marco, St. Nicholas, Riverside, Avondale, Ortega, the beach communities (Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach, Jacksonville Beach), Mandarin, and the Southside. We also take projects in other areas of Jacksonville when the scope and design intent align with our naturalistic approach. Our studio in Fernandina Beach is 35 to 45 minutes from most Jacksonville neighborhoods, which keeps us close enough for regular site visits during construction and establishment.

Historic neighborhoods demand sensitivity to architectural context. We select materials and plantings that complement the period and style of each home — brick and tabby for Mediterranean Revival properties, natural stone and native shrubs for Craftsman bungalows, formal hedging and courtyard designs for Colonial homes. We also consider the neighborhood's streetscape as a whole. In San Marco and Riverside, front gardens are visible from the sidewalk and contribute to the public experience of the street. Our designs honor that relationship while still creating private, functional spaces within the property.

Jacksonville's mature live oak canopy creates deep shade that eliminates most sun-loving species. We build shade gardens using native ferns (royal fern, cinnamon fern, southern shield fern), cast iron plant, coontie palm, wild coffee, beautyberry, and Florida anise. For ground cover, we favor mondo grass, liriope, and native violet rather than struggling turf. Camellias provide winter bloom in filtered light, and native azaleas add spring color. The result is a lush, layered garden that thrives in shade rather than fighting it — a woodland composition that feels natural beneath the oaks.

Properties along the St. Johns River, its tributaries, or the Intracoastal Waterway are subject to regulations from the St. Johns River Water Management District, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the City of Jacksonville's environmental review. Work within the riparian buffer zone, any modification to bulkheads or shoreline, and stormwater management changes typically require permits. We coordinate with the relevant agencies during the design phase and build permit timelines into the project schedule. For living shoreline installations, we also coordinate with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Starting the permit process early is critical — some environmental reviews take 60 to 90 days.

Bring Your Jacksonville Property to Life

Whether you are in a historic bungalow or a riverfront estate, we design outdoor spaces that feel like they were always meant to be there.