Interested in a Rain Garden?
Thinking About Installing A Rain Garden?
Rain gardens are a great way to collect water and keep it from running off of your property, picking up polluntants and silt and negatively affecting local waterways and the Bay. If you keep more of your stormwater runoff on your property (and if we all do this) there would be a remarkable affect on local waterways, their erosion and on the Cheasapeake Bay. Rain gardens are highly techincal gardens that require a long list of important decisions from proper location, proper size, proper plant selection, proper excavation depth and ponding depth.
Rain Garden Costs
We educate our customers about the complexity of rain gardens because they end up being more expensive than a typical landscape bed/garden bed to install. Rain gardens run around $22-26 per square foot (including design fees). The number of square feet your rain garden should be (it’s size) depends on the volume of water running to it. You can use a rain garden calulator and check sizing requirements to determine the proper size. Finding out the correct sizing is more important than trying to fit your rain garden into your budget. You don’t want to undersize a rain garden and then have it be inundated with water and not work correctly. You don’t want to oversize it and spend unnecessary money.
Rain Garden Location
Not all properties have a location where a rain garden would be appropriate. Many times clients want to put a rain garden where they have standing water- not a good idea! You want the water in a rain garden to drain within a few days. It’s always best to locate it closer to where the water is coming from than where it is sitting.
If your property isn’t a good candidate for a rain garden then a conservation landscape is another great option. See my blog about that here. They are less diffiult to install so more inexpensive. They are also covered by the County Cleanscapes program and they help stabilize soil and support wildlife habitat (including beneficial insects).
We have you covered whether you want to design and plant your own rain garden or if you want full service rain garden installation and a stewardship (maintenance) package for follow up care during establishment. Check out our rain garden guide below, our list of favorite plants for rain gardens, our video with more information about rain gardens and information for rain garden cost share programs!
HOAs Can Receive a Grant That Covers 85% of the Cost of New Rain Gardens
There is a Community Stormwater Partnership grant (click here) available to HOAs in Howard County! It will open in early May. Information can be accessed here. I highly recommend that you review the application process to be ready for the early May open date. While it is not difficult to apply for this grant it is popular and space fills quickly. We have done several projects where we plant garden beds where water is eroding soils or intersecting water on HOA property. We (Lauren’s Garden Service Landscape Designers) can come to the property and create a proposal for your projects.
When you receive your approval and your grant money you submit a deposit to us. We then design your projects and build them. We install signage so the neighborhood knows what the beds are for and can help maintain them. Here are some examples of beds installed under the Community Stormwater Partnership Grant in Ellicott City last year! Reach out today if your HOA (click here) is interested.
Here is my list of favorite rain garden plants.
Lauren’s Favorite Plants for Rain Gardens.pagesRain Garden Maintenance
Find information here on follow up care for your newly installed rain garden!
Rain Garden and Conservation Landscape Maintenance
Are you interested in installing a rain garden at your property? Fill out our form to schedule a free estimate. Project minimums start at $3,000 and are often in the $4-5K range and above depending on size of new plantings. Rain gardens are around $22-$26 a sq ft (including design fees) and conservation landscapes are around $18-$22/sq ft.