Attention to detail, cost-focused.
A well-designed landscape is a long-term investment. Professional maintenance ensures planting establishes successfully, public spaces remain attractive and assets continue to perform as intended for years to come.
Graduate Landscapes provides commercial landscape maintenance and aftercare services for residential developments, public open spaces, business parks, schools and biodiversity-led projects throughout the South East.
Unlike many maintenance contractors, we understand landscapes from the ground up. Having delivered award-winning projects ranging from large-scale green infrastructure schemes to biodiversity enhancement projects and public realm developments, we know exactly what is required to protect and enhance the landscapes we create.
Our experienced horticultural teams work closely with clients to develop tailored maintenance programmes that promote healthy establishment, support biodiversity and maintain the highest presentation standards throughout the year.
From Construction to Long-Term Stewardship
Many of the landscapes we maintain are schemes we originally designed or constructed. This continuity ensures our maintenance teams understand the original design intent, planting strategy and long-term objectives of each project, helping landscapes establish successfully and mature as intended.
Biodiversity-Focused Maintenance
Successful biodiversity schemes require more than installation; they require expert long-term management.
Graduate Landscapes delivers specialist maintenance programmes for wildflower meadows, native planting, woodland areas, SuDS features and ecological habitats, helping landscapes establish successfully and continue delivering measurable environmental benefits.
Drawing on our experience delivering award-winning biodiversity projects, including works at the Knepp Wilding Project, we help clients protect and enhance their green infrastructure through practical, sustainable maintenance that supports both ecological performance and visual quality.
