This is a garden of intermingled natures. The competition for a new German Chancellery in Canberra called for changes to the existing campus. Our proposal starts with an acknowledgement of the twin custodianship of the land upon which the Embassy is located – administratively the domain of the Bundesrepublik Deutschland and perpetually a part of Ngambri Country. In what we’ve called an “intermingled nature”, the planting of our project shifts from areas that foreground German plants to areas that foreground Australian plants. In between, plants of both nations share planting beds selected on common characteristics – the blue purple Kornblume co-planted with purple Scaevola aemula ‘Aussie Crawl’ and the Yellow Iris alongside the prostrate Golden Wattle. We propose subtle interventions to the as-found landscape – amplifying the semi-circular lawn and changes to paths for universal access. The location of the new Chancellery building completes the western edge of the site, reinforcing the secluded charm of this ideal place for outdoor gatherings. For the outer landscape – between the site boundary and street frontage – we propose an intensely planted foreground, a beautiful entanglement of German and Australian Indigenous flora, a place that creates refuge, food, habitat and an embassy of sorts for non-human kin.