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The Eastern Terrace of Government House Sydney has recently undergone a major facelift - its first in nine years. 

The challenge of re-designing the Eastern Terrace was one which leading landscape architect Jane Irwin could not resist when submitting her concept design at the end of 2018.

With the project completed, what can visitors to the House expect?

Garden

‘Within the heritage formality of the garden and its Italianate axis, it shifts into a more contemporary expression, wilder than what was there before’ Ms Irwin said. ‘People are wanting to see a more Australian garden. This makes perfect sense in our increasingly dry climate and soil type while also allowing for a burst of something different every season.’

Endless views and wafting sea breezes, circulating around foliage and floral arrangements and attracting a biodiverse diaspora of native birds, bees and insects, will frame the easy outward flow of people from the House and Arcade. New stone pavers have been laid, lawns replaced (2000 square metres of turf), fountain re-lined and beds replanted with 2931 new plants - native wildflowers and exotics. 

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The emphasis is firmly on the 80% Sydney and East coast wildflower mix, sourced from Sydney Wildflower Nursery and Alpine Nurseries.

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Sample Table of Plants:

Natives

Exotics

Acacia ‘Zest’

Alcantarea (Giant Bromeliad)

Actinotus helianthi (Flannel Flowers)

Aloe ‘Venus’

Anigozanthos (Kangaroo Paw)

Artemisia absinthium ‘Lambrook Silver’

Banksia ‘Pygmy Possum’

Calandrinia spectabilis (Rock Purslane)

Blandfordia grandiflora (Christmas Bells)

Euphorbia (Mediterranean Spurge and Milkweed)

Brunonia australis (Native Cornflower)

Geranium (Purple Cranesbill)

Brunoniella Australis (Blue Trumpet)

Hylotelephium spectabile (Showy Stonecrop)

Calocephalus citreus (Lemon Beauty Heads)

Ligularia dentata (Bigleaf)

Chrysocephalum ‘Desert Orange’ (Yellow Buttons)

Limonium perezii (Sea lavender)

Daisies (varietals)

Perovoskia atriplicifolia (Russian Sage)

Dampiera ‘Glasshouse Glory’

Salvia muirii

Eremophilia (Emu Bush)

Senecio mandraliscae (Blue finger)

Eucalyptus ‘Silver Moon’

 

Hibbertia obtusifolia ‘Sun Shine’ (Hoary Guinea Flower)

 

Melaleuca hypericifolia ‘Ulladulla Beacon’ Honey Myrtle

 

Pelargonium austral (Native Storksbill)

 

Prata purpurascens (White Root)

 

Rhagodia ‘Silver Border’ (Creeping Saltbush)

 

Thysanotus tuberosus (Common fringe lily)

 

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Opening up the garden’s line of vision to the full vista of harbour and sea and connecting it with the House were significant elements in the re-design. Some of the low plants in the garden, which had been designed by Myles Baldwin, were retained but many of the larger plants, such as salvias, had grown too tall, restricting views across the lawns and interrupting the grand spatial sweep from terrace to harbour. 

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The re-design features a central rondel ‘cloud bed’ with topiaried shrubs (casuarina, white correa, dwarf honey myrtle, bush germander, coastal rosemary), and planting in colours of grey, green and silver; a blue bed of herbaceous perennials connecting the eye to the harbour waters and a bed of predominantly yellow closer to the House.

Seasonal plantings will be reflected, with something new and different appearing every season - for example, a burst of yellow and blue florals and white flannel flowers in Spring, red Christmas bells at Christmas and white coronodiums at Easter. The design also allows for accent and special occasion plantings. The roses have been re-planted into a consolidated rose garden.

‘The garden planting mix is closer to what was here on this land before European settlement, taking its cue from Indigenous origins and cultural connections with the land rather than received colonial ideas or European plantings’ Ms Irwin said. ‘We know, for example, there were large areas of wildflower grasslands here at the time before European settlement.’

The re-opening of the Eastern Terrace garden is a day Government House and the landscape architect have been waiting for: 

‘This has been a fascinating project, requiring a deep level of research and engagement with the Conservation Management Plan as well as the views of the current Governor. I very much hope that this Government House garden will become a real point of discussion about gardens - both now and in the future.'

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