Maple Grove has spent the last decade becoming one of the most desirable communities in the northwest metro. The housing stock is newer, the schools are strong, the retail corridor along Elm Creek Boulevard draws from a wide geography. Buyers pay a premium to be here. But walk through Arbor Glen, through the neighborhoods off Brockton Lane, or through the developments near Elm Creek Park Reserve, and most front yards look like they belong to a different home entirely.
The homes are high-quality. The landscaping is not. This is not unusual for newer construction anywhere in the metro. But in Maple Grove, where the homes themselves are often very well executed, the contrast is sharper than it might be in an older suburb where expectations are more variable.
What Newer Maple Grove Homes Typically Start With
Builder landscaping on newer Maple Grove construction follows a predictable pattern. The lot is graded and sodded. Foundation beds are cut shallow and filled with a handful of low-maintenance shrubs, typically boxwoods, spirea, or basic ornamental grasses. A single ornamental tree is placed in the front lawn, usually off-center without a clear design reason. Everything gets a layer of dyed mulch that looks acceptable for one season and fades into gray by the following spring.
The open lot characteristic of many Maple Grove neighborhoods means the front of the home gets full exposure. There are no mature trees to add character or soften the look. The lawn is visible from the street without interruption. This can work in the homeowner's favor when the landscaping is well-designed, but it makes the absence of intentional design immediately obvious.
The Four Moves That Make the Biggest Visual Difference
Expanding and reshaping the foundation beds
Builder beds are typically too narrow to allow for proper plant layering. The first move in most Maple Grove front yard upgrades is expanding the beds outward, curving them to follow the natural flow of the architecture, and creating enough depth to plant in distinct layers. A bed that is only two feet deep cannot carry much visual weight. A bed that extends four to six feet gives the design room to breathe.
Adding vertical structure near the corners and entry
One of the most reliable ways to make a newer home look more finished from the street is to add vertical structure at the corners of the home. A columnar evergreen, a well-placed ornamental tree, or an upright shrub mass creates height and frames the facade. The same logic applies to the front entry. Flanking the door with taller plantings draws the eye toward the entry and makes the home feel more composed.
Creating plant layering with height variation
Layering is the design principle that separates a designed yard from a planted one. It means placing taller plants toward the back of the bed, medium-height plants in the middle, and lower-growing perennials or ground covers at the front edge. This creates a sense of depth from the curb that reads as intentional even from a distance. For open lots with good street visibility, layering pays off immediately.
Building in year-round presence with evergreen anchors
In a Minnesota winter, a yard without evergreen structure looks abandoned. The open lots in many Maple Grove neighborhoods make this more visible, not less. Building in enough evergreen mass to hold the yard's shape through winter is not optional if the goal is year-round curb appeal. Dwarf conifers, broadleaf evergreens where the exposure allows, and structural shrubs that retain their form through dormancy all contribute to a yard that looks considered in January, not just July.
What This Looks Like as a Project
For a typical newer Maple Grove home, a meaningful front yard upgrade is not a months-long project. It is a focused install that expands beds, removes underperforming builder stock, introduces a designed plant palette, and edges the beds cleanly. Most projects of this scope wrap in one to three days. The result is immediately visible and does not require ongoing intervention to maintain its look.
The home already has the quality. The front yard has been waiting to catch up. For Maple Grove homeowners who have invested in the interior and are ready to address the exterior, RoostPop's front yard transformation packages offer a clear, fixed-price path. Exploring the package options for Maple Grove homes is the right first step.