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Award-Winning Wattlebird Garden in Nagasaki, Japan

An international show garden combining hardscape design and installation with artistic narrative, delivering an award-winning landscape shaped by form, memory, and experience.

Curved timber bench seating wrapping around central fire feature with decorative metal dragon screen backdrop in Nagasaki
Conceptual Show Garden
Published April 5, 2026
Special Thank you to:

Artistic mentor: George Dimovski (inspiration + collaboration)“Nagasaki colleagues and Gardening World Cup management” (Event Host)

Awarded Best Design at the 2015 Gardening World Cup in Nagasaki, Japan, The Garden of the Little Wattlebird represents a deeply personal and expressive approach to landscape design. Inspired by a childhood artwork depicting the movement of the Australian Wattlebird, the project brings together art, memory, and built form to create a garden that feels both symbolic and experiential.

The design centres on a curved seating form that wraps around a stone-paved gathering space and fire feature, establishing a strong foundation for connection and interaction. Surrounding layers of planting create enclosure and softness, shaping a space that offers comfort, privacy, and retreat. This reflects a considered approach to outdoor living space design, where the emotional experience of the space is as important as its physical structure.

Material selection and composition are guided by repetition and rhythm, with textures, shapes, and colour working together to create balance and cohesion. The result aligns with modern garden aesthetics, while still maintaining a strong narrative rooted in the original artwork.

Delivered in a complex international environment, the project required adaptability across language, materials, and construction methods. Despite these challenges, the final outcome demonstrates the strength of professional backyard planning and execution, bringing a conceptual design to life under pressure.

The result is a landscape that connects art and place, recognised on a global stage for its clarity, creativity, and ability to bring people together.

The Garden Of The Little Wattlebird

Behind the Build & Progress

This is where the real story is. Before the polish, before the final photoshoot! it’s the graft, the grit, the last minute fixes on the fly that shape everything. Materials arriving, the final details being tested, the team on the tools, working together to make it happen. Show gardens are a different beast, they really stretch you. and you have to move fast. Ten days, sometimes less, to bring an idea to life. Its often a steep learning curve even for seasoned landscape designers – it forces clarity and communication. What stays, what goes, what needs to bend to the site and conditions on the fly. And in amongst it all, there’s a such a good energy. Crew, collaboration, a few laughs, plenty of problem-solving.

By the time the gates open, you’re not just looking at a garden. You’re seeing ten days of moments, decisions, and a team pulling together to make it happen.

By: Paal Grant
Paal Grant is a regional Victorian landscape designer specialising in intelligent, low-maintenance acreage gardens that integrate architecture, climate and long-term performance across complex rural sites.

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