Anonymous wrote:I would. My inspiration for my landscaping comes from magazines & tv shows, and not from my neighbors. I don't live in a cookie cutter neighborhood and I cherish that. It's especially hard when you've put a lot of blood, sweat and tears into that landscape. My next door neighbor has copied alot of my flower beds, which at first was flattering, until I noticed the placement of those flowers were the exact as mine. I have white roses in the center of a 30 ft circle, with a statue, and my color theme is white, lavender, peach, yellow, which she has also come close to duplicating. But the real issue.....she's bought the same style patio set & found the same cushions, bird bath, and trellis for the same type of vine. I find that a little creepy.....
Anonymous wrote:I noticed a house a few doors down was having landscaping work done. At first, I was happy because it means enhancement to the neighborhood. BUT... as the work progressed, it's obvious that they basically copied our ENTIRE design. This includes the plants (same trees and bushes), paver color, paver style, layout -- pretty much EVERYTHING.
I am beyond annoyed at their audacity. I'm waiting for the other neighbors to mention it as I'm sure they've noticed the "resemblance." To make things worse, I'm sure that they had to come onto my property to get a closer look at the details of the borders, angles and curves.
We redid our entire landscape and driveway a few years ago because it was sorely needed, and we want to make sure we are investing in the overall appeal of our neighborhood. It took us a lot of time and money to hire a reputable team and execute the design. I admit that I've looked at other homes for inspiration, but took pains to NOT blatantly copy. I believe it is intellecutally lazy and disrespectful that they would lift our design.
I've never spoken to these neighbors and going forward may just keep it that way. Curious to hear from others on whether you've had a similar situation? What was your reaction? Any advice on how to respond... or not respond?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:C'mon OP! I would be flattered. Also, you should go over and compliment their yard. It is great they did this as visual unity is rare but looks great.
Some call it "visual unity", others "cookie cutter". I'm suspecting many of the people who think this is great or no big deal live in cookie cutter subdivisions.