A serene park pathway lined with large, mature trees that form a canopy overhead. A park bench sits on the right side, surrounded by lush green grass.

Purchase Local or
Indigenous Materials

Support communities with locally sourced or indigenous materials

Using locally produced materials has multiple advantages. It reduces the fossil fuels and associated pollutants (including greenhouse gas emissions) required for shipping. It supports local businesses and feeds money into the regional economy. And one of the beauties of landscaping with local materials is that they seem to belong and enhance the region’s unique sense of place.

What constitutes “local” varies to some extent, depending on the type of material. The heavier the material, the more energy it consumes and the more pollutants emitted during transport, and therefore the closer the source should be.

The Sustainable Sites Initiative (SITES®) recommends the following guidelines:

  • Crushed concrete and other aggregates used as a foundation for paths and driveways should be extracted, recovered, or manufactured within 50 miles of the site.
  • Compost and other soil amendments should come from within 50 miles of the site.
  • Plants should be grown at a facility within 250 miles of the site.
  • All other materials should be extracted, harvested, recovered, and manufactured within 500 miles of the site.
A serene park pathway lined with large, mature trees that form a canopy overhead. A park bench sits on the right side, surrounded by lush green grass.

Find trusted sources for local materials

Resources for finding local materials:

  • Local landscape architecture firms – Firms that have pursued LEED® certification from the U.S. Green Building Council or follow the Sustainable Sites Initiative criteria have likely conducted research and can recommend local materials.
  • Local nurseries
  • Local garden centers
A close-up of a rustic stone wall made of irregularly shaped rocks stacked together, with soil at its base.
On-site materials can be repurposed in projects such as this stone wall. Image credit: Philip Hawkins

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