Suburban San Antonio home gets modern yard makeover

2022-06-18 19:58:28 By : Ms. Wendy Huang

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Billy Perryman's contemporary front yard glows warmly at night.

Twenty years after designing the front yard himself, Billy Perryman said the look had become tired and outdated. During the yard restoration, the overlarge crepe myrtle was removed.

Billy Perryman’s yard is a mix of Palm Springs and Japanese garden inspiration.

The backyard of Billy Perryman’s Redland Estates home features multiple fountains and a variety of plants.

Billy Perryman’s water-saving landscape uses artificial turf, large stepping stones and aggregate to give his Redland Estates home a Palm Springs feel.

In addition to artificial turf and hardscape, the home is landscaped with water-sipping plants.

The emerald green turf contrasts nicely with the dark shadow rock, especially when bordered by white limestone brick border.

Billy Perryman’s water-saving landscape uses artificial turf, large stepping stones and aggregate to give his Redland Estates home a Palm Springs feel.

A yucca is backlit against Billy Perryman's home, which is located near the intersection of U.S. 281 and Loop 1604.

Billy Perryman started his yard renovation by replacing his fence with one made with horizontal boards for a contemporary look that makes the yard appear larger.

The new backyard has a small seating area shaded by a large crepe myrtle.

Previously, this side yard was, according to Perryman, “an out-of-control no-man’s land.” Installing artificial turf keeps it neat and clean year-round.

For 20 years, Billy Perryman lived happily with the landscaping he’d designed in his front and backyards shortly after moving into his Redland Estates home near U.S. 281 and Loop 1604.

But when the pandemic first hit two years ago, the educational consultant found himself working from home. As he spent more time in the yard, he realized it had grown tired and outdated and needed a radical redo.

The project was done in stages, and replaced a fence, redesigned the side yards, added more features to the backyard and finally totally overhauled the front yard. By far the most dramatic of the updates, the front yard’s curved, organic lines and native landscape have been replaced with artificial turf and blocky, geometric hardscape for a clean, modern look.

Billy Perryman’s water-saving landscape uses artificial turf, large stepping stones and aggregate to give his Redland Estates home a Palm Springs feel.

Drought-tolerant and low-maintenance, the look is enhanced by minimalist outdoor lighting, sparsely planted greenery and large poured-in-place concrete stepping stones whose rectangular shape echoes the modern garage and front doors, which had been replaced in 2017. The result looks unlike any other yard in the neighborhood, with influences borrowed from both Palm Springs and traditional Japanese gardens, but with a fun twist.

“People have said it looks like you could play miniature golf on my front lawn,” Perryman said, laughing.

Rather than do the entire front yard in artificial turf, Perryman said he wanted to create visual interest by contrasting large rectangles of small, blackish-gray shadow stone with blocks of emerald green turf, separating the two with a border of bright white limestone landscape bricks.

On ExpressNews.com: Is artificial turf worth the price? These homeowners say yes — especially with the drought

“I like having the right angles in the design and the contrast between the two,” he said. “It really makes the edging pop.”

Perryman said the turf cost more than $10,000 and the shadow stone cost several thousand dollars more.

The backyard of this Redland estates home features multiple fountains and a variety of plants.

The first project Perryman tackled was in August 2020 when he installed a new, horizontal board fence in the backyard for a contemporary look that elevates overall aesthetic and makes the yard appear larger than it is.

“I’d already updated the garage and front doors, so I wanted to continue moving in that direction,” he said. “I wanted a fence that has style and artistry and is aesthetically pleasing — not just another utilitarian fence.”

Once that was completed, he turned his attention to the side yard, which he called “an out of control, no-man’s-land,” where weeds poked through the landscape fabric and obscured the rocks and yucca plants placed there. Because the narrow space between his house and the neighbor’s made it hard to grow anything (other than weeds), he decided to take the plunge and install artificial turf instead, adding an iron gate midway between the front and back.

Billy Perry said the contemporary lighting he added to his backyard makes it look like a hotel resort.

Next, he upgraded the backyard, removing overgrown shrubbery, reconfiguring the curved flower beds and adding three water features. He kept the center area natural grass and added backyard landscape lighting.

“I like the fact that the backyard has more of a tropical feel, with more curves and more flowing plants, than the front,” he said. “At night it looks like a resort hotel back there.”

Finally, he turned his attention to the other side yard, which is much wider than the one on the opposite side of the house.

This pathway on the other side of the house was designed to provide visitors with an intriguing journey as they walk from the front to the backyard.

“I got to thinking, I’ve got this beautiful backyard but there’s no way to nicely get to it from the front of the house,” he said. “I wanted to build a pathway that would prepare visitors for what they were about to see as they made that journey.”

The path he helped design is made of segmented cement stepping stones that vary in size as they jog around the air conditioning compressor and through another gate, with lighting to illuminate the path in the evening.

“It was fabulous,” he said of the pathway, which is easily visible from the street. “I got a million positive comments about it. Even the school bus driver stopped me to compliment it.”

Trouble was, now the front yard looked horrible by comparison. “I didn’t accept the original builder’s landscaping package because I wanted a yard that reflected my style,” he said. “So I’d designed something with curved beds, metal edging and native plants and hired a company to install it.”

It was a look that no longer fit his personality.

“I had seen photographs of contemporary yards on HGTV, in magazines and on TV and I just zeroed in on that; that’s what I liked.”

Billy Perryman’s water-saving landscape uses artificial turf, large stepping stones and aggregate to give his Redland Estates home a Palm Springs feel.

He told the company he was working with, San Antonio-based VHS Landscaping, that he wanted something clean, plain, even austere, with straight-arrow lines and razor-sharp, 90-degree corners.

On ExpressNews.com: Best drought-tolerant plants in sun and shade for color and flowers in your San Antonio garden landscape

Two large boulders dug up while the neighborhood was being built provide additional visual interest to the front yard, as does the shadow stone bed planted with low-growing drought-tolerant plants like santolina and a Mediterranean palm.

Perryman said that because the work was completed only a few months ago, it’s too soon to tell how much he’ll save on his SAWS bill. But he already likes not having to water as much as he used to.

“Water is a precious commodity, so it just seemed like a smart idea to install the turf,” he said.

He also likes how pristine and green the yard stays, regardless of how hot and dry it gets.

“I have a lawn service, but I still have to go out and pick up one or two leaves,” he said. “There’s something about artificial grass. It’s like carpet; you want to keep it clean.”

rmarini@express-news.net | Twitter: @RichardMarini

Richard A. Marini is a features reporter for the San Antonio Express-News where he's previously been an editor and columnist. The Association of Food Journalists once awarded him Best Food Columnist. He has freelanced for American Archaeology, Cooking Light and many other publications. Reader's Digest once sent him to Alaska for a week. He came back.