Downplay or Dress Up the DrivewayBerstler says that for many newer homes the driveway is often the first thing you see. "Is that the most welcoming thing for someone coming up to your home? Not really. It might be the most welcoming thing for your SUV." Because the driveway is the largest hard area near the house, the material and look of the driveway and garage have a huge impact on curb appeal. "Its probably the number one thing Im asked to deal with," says Berstler. "Its either, How do I make this look better? or How do I direct peoples attention away from the driveway and toward the front door?"
Berstlers first choice is to reorient visitors away from the driveway by creating a path to the front door, either from the street or from the driveway. She also looks at the driveway itself. "A big old gray concrete driveway is pretty unattractive," she says. "But stain it and make it look more like stone, or apply one of these brush-on coatings that gives it a dimension like stone or even paint it with a sealer and a pigment in the sealer."
Riley and partner Keith Chinn once coated an old driveway with a thin coat of brick-design concrete to complement the brick chimney and porch. It wasnt inexpensive, "but you dont have to rip out all the old and put down a new driveway," Riley says, "and it was a great way to make a bunch of different surfaces match."
Pay Attention to Details
Curb appeal is also "the whole package," as Riley says, which means the small details are as important as the big picture. "The finishing details are what really pulls it together," says Riley, who once inserted small, colorful ceramic tiles into brick steps to carry through a color scheme.