Your commercial landscape can provide easy sustainability wins in addition to making a good first impression. Landscaping is typically an underutilized sustainability asset. As tenants, investors, and municipal partners raise the bar on environmental awareness, there is a greater need to produce documented results.
The good news? Your green spaces have measurable potential already. Water waste is one example where you can quickly turn wasted resources into an eco-friendly situation. Simple solutions we’ll talk about are the kind of year-over-year data that can strengthen ESG reports and help satisfy LEED requirements. Smart irrigation technology alone can slash outdoor water use by 20–50%.
Beyond water, the species used in your landscape beds may be hindering your sustainability efforts. Not to mention how the wrong plant in the wrong place is likely costing you more for upkeep.
This article breaks down four opportunities to turn your landscape into a sustainability asset. We even included a simple action plan you can put in motion as early as Earth Day.
It’s tempting to only think about landscaping in regard to appearance. Does it look tidy and maintained? Does it reflect nicely on the property? Those questions are good starting points, but are no longer the whole story.
Sustainability expectations are rising on nearly all commercial properties. Tenants, investors, and municipal partners are asking harder questions about environmental efforts. Your landscape is one of the most visible places where you can highlight meaningful efforts.
When green spaces are managed well, they can contribute to measurable outcomes that include:
These are trackable benefits that can be shown in ESG landscaping reports and support broader commercial landscape sustainability goals.
For many properties, though, the landscape is being underutilized in sustainability planning. So, we’re breaking down four opportunities to change that through:
The best place to start on commercial landscape water conservation is irrigation. Too many commercial properties are running systems designed to run on a schedule vs. responding to conditions. The result is lots of preventable waste.
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Irrigation Issues |
Downsides |
|
Fixed-schedule timers |
Ignore rain, seasonal weather swings, and soil saturation |
|
Irrigation water wasted |
30–60% lost through leaks, broken heads, misaligned zones, and poor scheduling |
|
Broken sprinkler heads |
Can waste 25,000 gallons of water per year (EPA) |
|
Outdated irrigation systems |
Make it difficult to document water savings for ESG reporting or LEED landscaping requirements |
Smart irrigation sustainability changes the game for our planet, on Earth Day and beyond. Modern water-efficient commercial irrigation systems use the following technology to irrigate based on need.
Yellowstone Landscape approaches water conservation with system-level water audits that identify broken heads, pressure issues, poor zone scheduling, and coverage problems. Water audits establish a usage baseline, so improvements may be documented and reported.
A native plant is a species that has evolved in a specific region over thousands of years, making it adapted to local soils, rainfall patterns, temperatures, and even wildlife. That makes natives super-valuable for eco-friendly commercial properties.
Many conventional commercial landscapes rely on too many non-native ornamental species that require constant care to survive. Water, fertilizer, and pesticides are then often overused to maintain plants that look nice but are ecologically out of place. Native plant landscaping for commercial properties is the ideal strategy to counter plants that don’t fit a region, as the stats show below.
We need to dispel a myth. Native doesn't mean wild or unkempt. Properly designed, native plant landscapes have high curb appeal and a professional look. Corporate properties are increasingly using native design as a visible signal of environmental values to tenants, investors, and visitors. They also improve stormwater absorption, which can reduce flood risk and potentially lower insurance exposure.
Yellowstone operates across the Southeast, Northeast, Midwest, Southwest, and California. Our local branches understand each region’s rainfall, humidity, soil, heat profiles, etc. Plant palettes must be specific to each location.
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Plant |
Type |
Region |
Notes |
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Southern Live Oak |
Southeast |
Iconic evergreen shade tree; wildlife magnet |
|
|
American Beautyberry |
Shrub |
Southeast |
Bright purple berry clusters; loved by birds |
|
Black-Eyed Susan |
Perennial |
Southeast |
Drought-tolerant pollinator magnet |
|
Saguaro Cactus |
Cactus |
Southwest |
Iconic desert giant; supports birds and bats |
|
Yucca |
Shrub/Perennial |
Southwest |
Deep-rooted; attracts hummingbirds and native bats |
|
Blanket Flower |
Perennial |
Southwest |
Blooms summer–fall; thrives in heat and dry soil |
|
Purple Coneflower |
Perennial |
Midwest |
Classic prairie native; butterfly magnet |
|
Butterfly Milkweed |
Perennial |
Midwest |
Critical monarch habitat; bold orange blooms |
|
Little Bluestem |
Grass |
Midwest |
Prairie grass that turns copper-red in fall |
|
Eastern Flowering Dogwood |
Tree |
Northeast |
Stunning spring bloomer; wildlife food source |
|
Shrub |
Northeast |
Edible and ornamental; brilliant fall color |
|
|
American Holly |
Tree |
Northeast |
Evergreen with red berries; birds flock to it in winter |
|
California Poppy |
Annual/Perennial |
California |
State flower; self-seeds in poor, dry soil |
|
Toyon |
Shrub |
California |
Evergreen, fire-adapted, and drought-tough |
|
Arroyo Lupine |
Perennial |
California |
Fixes nitrogen in soil; feeds butterfly larvae |
To ensure sustainability and aesthetics work together, Yellowstone's design teams help match the right regional species to each property. Our design services are free for our maintenance clients.
Pollinators (bees, butterflies, moths, hummingbirds) are vital to life, as they’re responsible for roughly one-third of the global food supply. Sadly, these helpful insect populations have declined due to habitat loss and overuse of pesticides. Commercial properties, often representing some of the largest green spaces in any given area, have a real role to play.
Supporting pollinators is a measurable contribution to biodiversity, which is increasingly tracked in ESG landscaping frameworks and sustainability disclosures.
A pollinator-friendly commercial landscape is designed with intention:
The business case is solid. Corporate and healthcare tenants are factoring sustainability credentials into lease decisions more often. A pollinator garden with proper signage can become evidence to use in Earth Day social media posts and annual company reports. Plus, these gardens can contribute to LEED credits and support certifications (e.g., National Wildlife Federation's Certified Wildlife Habitat).
The PR value of pollinator designs is high. It's one of the best "show your work" opportunities a commercial property has that connects to sustainability.
Yellowstone Landscape designs pollinator-friendly installs around four elements:
LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) gets attention on Earth Day as the world's most widely used green building rating system. Certification highlights environmental credibility for tenants, investors, and regulators. Most property managers focus LEED efforts on building systems (e.g., HVAC and lighting) but may underestimate how much sustainable commercial landscaping means to the scoring.
LEED landscaping requirements span multiple credit categories, making the landscape one of the highest-leverage, lowest-disruption ways to gain points.
Here's where green building landscaping LEED credits come from:
LEED certification requires careful documentation. So, your landscape partner needs to track water use data, species selections, chemical application logs, and site coverage measurements. A landscape company that doesn't understand LEED can cost a property points through:
Hiring a landscape partner with LEED experience ensures decisions are made with the scorecard in mind from design to maintenance.
The commercial landscape ESG reporting connection is direct. Landscape performance data works for common frameworks like GRI, SASB, and CDP:
The landscape is one of the few places on a commercial property where new sustainability data can be generated fairly quickly.
Earth Day landscaping tips for commercial properties don’t mean you have to do a full redesign. The most effective sustainability victories in landscaping involve simple but documented decisions.
Request a full irrigation system evaluation to find broken heads, pressure issues, and zones running on fixed schedules regardless of weather. Establish a baseline water usage number. Ask your landscape partner specifically about ET sensor compatibility and smart controller upgrades.
Walk your property with your landscape account manager to identify high-maintenance plants that require heavy watering or labor. Flag turf areas with poor drainage or low foot traffic because these may be prime options for converting to native plant landscaping. Ask for a regional plant palette recommendation matched to your specific soil conditions, sun exposure, branding, etc.
Look for low-visibility spaces that can be redesigned without disrupting primary aesthetics. Even a single zone converted to pollinator-friendly spaces makes a measurable difference. Check to see if any green space already qualifies for formal habitat certification.
Set up a discussion with your landscape provider and bring sustainability targets in writing (water reduction percentages, ESG reporting deadlines, LEED certification status, or goals). Ask them if they track water usage and chemical application logs. Be certain they understand LEED documentation requirements.
Earth Day is a timely deadline worth using. It creates momentum to start conversations that could otherwise get pushed off until next quarter.
In closing, we want to share one more tip connected to Earth Day. Keeping living roots in the soil year-round supports microbial populations. And dead microbes make up a big portion of soil organic matter, helping the soil recycle and store carbon (source: University of Maryland Extension).
Similarly, other pieces of your landscape are already adding unseen benefits. The question is whether they’re working with your sustainability goals as effectively as they could be.
April 22 is Earth Day and it’s the perfect time to consider that question. At Yellowstone Landscape, we’d like to help you with answers that add to curb appeal while enhancing your property’s sustainability. Contact us for a landscaping consultation today.
Q: When a property manager comes to you with sustainability goals or an ESG requirement, what's the first thing you assess on their property?
Irrigation is usually the biggest issue. Once we know how the system is running and when, we move to chemical dependency because that's where other measurable opportunities are.
Q: Can you walk me through what a water audit looks like — what do you find most commonly, and what's the typical impact after making corrections?
We check controller schedules, head coverage, leaks, and whether the system is weather-responsive or just running on a calendar. Many commercial properties see the difference in their first utility bill after corrections.
Q: What does a pollinator-friendly landscape design look like in a commercial setting?
A dedicated pollinator garden near the entrance makes a visible ESG statement. But the higher-impact approach is weaving it throughout — native groundcovers replacing turf sections, flowering shrubs instead of clipped boxwood.
Q: Have you worked on properties pursuing LEED certification? What landscaping elements came up most in those conversations?
Yes. Outdoor water use reduction typically comes up first. It's a LEED requirement before you can earn water credits. That means documenting baseline irrigation, specifying native and drought-tolerant species, and often switching to drip or reclaimed water. Heat island reduction through tree canopy placement comes up too.
Q: Are there specific ESG metrics your clients are reporting on where your landscape services have made a measurable difference?
Water reduction in gallons per year is the easiest to document. Chemical reduction is another. Class A office and multifamily clients are also tracking species counts and tree canopy coverage.
Q: What's the most common misconception property managers have about sustainable landscaping?
Cost concerns. Owners may compare installation costs without factoring in the five-year maintenance picture. Once native plantings are established, you should be spending less on water, fertilizer, and service visits. The "it looks wild" concern can be cleared up by showing them a portfolio of well-executed commercial installations.
Q: What's one change a property manager could make before Earth Day this year that would have the most immediate sustainability impact?
Audit your irrigation controller. Earth Day is April 22nd, so there's time to identify what's wasting water and fix it before summer heat shows up. Adjust schedules, repair obvious leaks, add a rain sensor if one isn't in place. The cost here is reasonable and gives you a clear before-and-after sustainability stat.