Hastings also laid out the gardens and grounds, which were landscaped by
John Davenport. To the west of the house is a lawn with views across a
ha-ha to the park, and there are terraces to the south and east. The main formal approach was from Daylesford village to the south-west, through a park of approximately , with many mature trees and areas of woodland, two lakes (one of which has an island, formerly the site of a decorative temple), and a walled kitchen garden. A garden of approximately surrounds the house, with mainly 19th century planting. Some of the stonework in the grounds may be derived from the Grey Geese of Adlestrop, a collection of stones (possibly a
Neolithic monument) found on the top of Adelstrop Hill nearby. The gardens are listed at Grade II* listed on the
Register of Historic Parks and Gardens in 1986. A stable block and
icehouse in the grounds have separate Grade II listings.
Orangery About east of the house is an orangery which was constructed in 1789–90. Sources offer contradictory suggestions as to the architect. David Verey and Alan Brooks, in their
Gloucestershire I: The Cotswolds volume in the
Pevsner Buildings of England series, revised and reissued in 2000, suggest John Davenport.
Historic England's listing for the house's park and garden follows this, suggesting that the attribution to Davenport is "almost certain[..]". The Historic England listing record for the orangery, however, makes no mention of Davenport, and suggests it is "probably" by Cockerell. In Gothick style, the seven-bay building is constructed from ashlars, with tall pointed windows facing south over the park, a pediment above the central three bays, round wings at either end, and battlements with pinnacles. Many details are based on the pattern books of
Batty Langley. ==Footnotes==