As well as being outstanding examples of garden design they are working with their environment and the climate change that we are experiencing.
LONDON COLLEGE OF GARDEN DESIGN NAMES MOST ICONIC NEW GARDENS
The London College of Garden Design (LCGD) recently asked an international panel of speakers to choose their iconic garden of the previous decade that will, in their mind, be the gardens we will still be talking about as landmarks in garden design in 20 years-time.
Everyone who came to the presentations was asked to vote for the most iconic new gardens and the results are now in!
The top-rated gardens are –
1. Hilldrop – John Little’s garden in Essex UK, championed by Nigel Dunnett
2. Stonefields – Paul Bangay’s garden in Victoria, Australia, championed by Brent Reid
3. Hamilton Gardens – Hamilton City’s community garden in New Zealand, championed by Ben Hoyle
Each of six speakers championed their chosen garden and explained why they think we’ll still be talking about their choice of garden in 2042. Other gardens nominated were Wij Tradgardar (Sweden), Grey to Green (Sheffield, UK), Chanticleer (USA).
LCGD Director Andrew Fisher Tomlin said “It is good to see that our panel of experts nominated so many gardens with a community focus that inspire a wide range of designers, gardeners and non-gardeners. As well as being outstanding examples of garden design they are working with their environment and the climate change that we are experiencing.”
Attendee nominations
Attendees were asked to nominate their own favourite gardens that they felt would become iconic in the future revealing a much more UK focussed selection reflecting where most of the attendees have been able to visit over the past few years.
New gardens that were nominated included Middleton Lodge, Nant y Bedd (recently named RHS Partner Garden of the Year) and the Queen Elisabeth Olympic Park. Ganna Walska Lotusland, a botanical garden in California was a top international nomination.
ENDS
About New Iconic Gardens
LCGD had previously ran a New Iconic Gardens conference in 2011 in conjunction with Gardens Illustrated. In 2022 we were able to rate gardens using an online survey and each garden was given an average score from a total attendance of 215 people.
About the London College of Garden Design
Based at Kew Gardens, the UK’s leading garden design school combines the experience of the UK’s leading garden professionals. LCGD Melbourne, our College in Australia is based in the Melbourne Gardens of the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria.
For more information, please contact:
Andrew Fisher Tomlin
[email protected]
07957 855457