Landscaping in Kowloon City
Compare local landscaping & garden design pros in Kowloon City and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: HK$5,000–HK$200,000
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Landscaping prices in Kowloon City
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Balcony green-up Planters, plants, and simple irrigation for a typical balcony | HK$5,000 | HK$12,000 | HK$25,000 |
| Rooftop garden (demountable design) Movable planters, decking tiles, plants, and irrigation within loading limits | HK$30,000 | HK$80,000 | HK$200,000 |
| Village house garden Planting, paving, and irrigation for a NT village house plot | HK$25,000 | HK$60,000 | HK$150,000 |
| Green wall installation Modular green wall with irrigation, residential scale | HK$15,000 | HK$40,000 | HK$100,000 |
How to hire a landscaping pro in Hong Kong
- Define the space type first: rooftop, podium garden, balcony, or house garden (mostly NT village houses and luxury properties) — each has different structural and management constraints
- For rooftops and podiums, get a structural loading assessment — saturated planters are heavy, and unauthorised rooftop structures are a Buildings Department enforcement target
- Check your building's DMC (Deed of Mutual Covenant) and management office rules before any communal-area or rooftop work
- Use contractors familiar with Minor Works Control if any fixed structures, pergolas, or significant alterations are involved
- Confirm typhoon-readiness: anchoring for planters and screens, and a pre-typhoon securing plan — wind loading destroys unanchored gardens
- Confirm drainage design — blocked rooftop drains cause building-wide problems and liability
- Get itemised quotes separating structural work, planters, plants, and irrigation
Hong Kong has no landscaping licence, but the Buildings Ordinance governs structures: unauthorised rooftop structures are actively enforced against, and fixed garden structures may fall under the Minor Works Control System requiring registered contractors. Building DMCs and management offices control what's permitted on roofs, podiums, and balconies.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives landscaping prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How do I compare landscaping quotes properly?
Insist every quote itemises: site prep and excavation, materials by type and grade, labour, waste disposal, and planting with plant sizes specified. The classic trap is comparing a quote with 100mm compacted sub-base against one with paving laid on sand — same look for a year, then one fails. Cheapest itemised quote beats cheapest total.
Do I need a landscape designer or just a landscaper?
For a single element — new lawn, one patio, a border — a good landscaper designs as they quote. For a full garden rework, a designer's plan (a few hundred to a few thousand, depending on market) pays for itself: contractors quote against the same drawing so bids are comparable, and sequencing mistakes (irrigation after paving, for example) get designed out.
What's the difference between softscape and hardscape, and why does it matter for price?
Softscape is living material — turf, plants, trees, soil. Hardscape is built structure — patios, paths, walls, decks, pergolas. Hardscape typically costs 2-4x more per square metre because it involves excavation, sub-bases, and skilled construction. Shifting your design 20% from hardscape to planting is the single biggest lever for cutting a landscaping quote.
How much does landscaping cost?
Landscaping is project work priced by scope, not time. The two big cost drivers are hardscape share (paving, walls, decking cost 2-4x planting per unit area) and access (tight access means hand-carrying materials). A planting-only refresh sits at the bottom of the range; a full redesign with paving, lighting, and irrigation sits at the top. Get itemised quotes so you can see where the money goes.
Can I supply my own materials or plants to cut landscaping costs?
Sometimes — but contractors mark up materials partly to warranty them, so supplying your own paving usually voids the guarantee on the surface (though not the workmanship). Plants are the better DIY-supply candidate if you can source quality stock. Discuss it at quote stage; springing owner-supplied materials on a contractor mid-project causes friction and disclaimers.
What maintenance does a new landscape need in year one?
The first year decides whether planting establishes: regular deep watering (especially trees and hedging), mulch top-ups, formative pruning, and quick replacement of failures. Many landscapers offer a 12-month establishment package or plant warranty conditional on documented watering. Budget 5-10% of project cost for year-one care, or the planting investment erodes.
What does landscaping cost in Hong Kong?
Balcony green-ups run HKD $5,000-$20,000; rooftop and podium garden projects commonly HKD $30,000-$200,000 depending on structural work and materials; village house gardens sit in between. Garden labour runs roughly HKD $150-$300 per hour. Material logistics (crane/lift access) are a bigger cost factor than in most markets.
Can I build a garden on my Hong Kong rooftop?
Only within limits: movable planters and furniture are generally fine if the DMC allows roof use and loading is safe, but fixed structures — pergolas, decking frames, sheds — risk classification as unauthorised building works, which the Buildings Department orders removed. Get the management office's written position and a structural loading check before spending; design 'demountable' to stay on the right side of the rules.
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