Chelsea Flower Show 2025 - The Show Gardens

Cha No Niwa - Japanese Tea Garden

Now, on to the show gardens which are undoubtedly the biggest highlight of the show. There were 15 official show gardens and I got photos of most of them, but not all. I'm beginning with the most popular, which was the "Cha No Niwa - Japanese Tea Garden" which won the RHS Garden of the Year award and was the People's Choice winner. 


This garden was designed by Japanese designer Kazuyuki Ishihara. Queen Elizabeth II referred to him as "The Magician of Greenery". 

I would say the second most-popular garden (judging by the crowds) was Jo Thompson's Glasshouse Garden.

The Glasshouse Garden

The inspiration for this garden came from The Glasshouse, an organization that supported women leaving prison through horticultural training, resettlement and employment. 


The following photo gives you an ideal of the crowds. This garden particularly was constantly surrounded by a thick barrier of people. I tried several times to get better photos. I should have looked at this one as soon as I got there. 



"The SongBird Survival Garden", designed by Nicola Oakley, was
 one of my favorites.


"The Down's Syndrome Scotland Garden" was designed by Nick Burton and Duncan Hall, and inspired by Hall's nephew Liam. 


Children with Cancer UK "A Place to Be", designed by Tom Clarke
and Ros Couts-Harwood.

The ADHD Foundation Garden, designed by Katy Terry.

The Wildlife Trust's British Rainforest, designed by Zoe Claymore,
 won the People's Choice All About Plants Garden award
.


The Wildlife Trust's British Rainforest





The Avanade Intelligence Garden by Tom Massey & Je Ahn, so named because it has sensors that monitor tree health. This was very beautiful and this photo doesn't do it justice.

The King's Trust Garden: Seeding Success by Joe Perkins, featured
screen printed glass panels.

Hospice UK: Garden of Compassion by Tom Hoblyn

The Addleshaw Goddard Freedom to Flourish Garden, designed by Carey Garden Design Studio. This won "Small Garden of the Year" award and "Best Construction".



I especially liked the gabion wall design. 


British Red Cross "Here for Humanity" Garden by John Warland and Tom Bannister. It was inspired by Henri Dunant, the Swiss visionary founder of the Red Cross Red Crescent Movement. 

This was on the most unique gardens at the show. These columnar concrete planters were amazing. 


Killik & Co. "Save For A Rainy Day" Garden by Baz Grainger. 


Tackle HIV Challenging Stigma Garden by Manoj Malde
was another favorite of mine. 



And that's a wrap! During the 18-day tour, we visited 35 attractions, mostly gardens but also some manor houses, cathedrals, a witchcraft museum and a cider processing plant. We stayed at seven different hotels. It was the trip of a lifetime for me. Hopefully, if all goes to plan, I will be going back this summer for a tour of eastern England that will include Sissinghurst and Great Dixter. I can't wait!




(Visited May 21, 2025)

Text and photos by Phillip Oliver, Dirt Therapy

Comments

Anonymous said…
Great photos! My family is going to Chelsea for the first time this year. Do you have any advice for us on the best way to maneuver the crowds? Any hidden gems we should seek out? Best time to arrive?
Phillip Oliver said…
You will love it! The only advice I can give is to get there as soon as the doors open. The first hour was not that bad. I saw half of the show gardens and then went inside the pavilion and then came back outside again (that was mainly because of rain). To me, it seemed that the outside was the most crowded, so I would see all of the show gardens first, then go inside the the pavilion. If I remember correctly, the whole thing is designed as a big loop, so it is pretty easy to maneuver without missing anything.
tz_garden said…
Amazing! I can't really pick a favorite, every time I did I changed my mind with the next photo. Thank you for sharing this, I understand why this is THE show. And you have new tours coming up, how wonderful!
Kris Peterson said…
Thanks for sharing your tour, and especially these shots of the Chelsea show gardens. I'm sure I watched coverage for the show on YouTube but I think I got more out of your photos than I did out of that coverage :)
Barbara H. said…
Loved them all! Thank you for so generously sharing your trip and the garden show. I'm pretty sure you have lots and lots of photos that didn't make the cut due to space and time so appreciate the gift of gardens you gave us. And you're going back! Wonderful!
danger garden said…
Your photos are wonderful, what an adventure. These gardens certainly put the ones at the NWFG Fest in their place. Then again, outdoors and in a culture that supports gardening both make a huge difference. (BTW, I finally posted my photos from your open garden during Study Weekend, sadly they're pretty bad... what with the contrasts and shadows from the bright sunshine)
Phillip Oliver said…
Thanks Loree, I'm off to your blog. I was hoping to attend the NWFG but could not. I've been watching videos on YouTube. I know you'll have a good post about them.
Anonymous said…
Fabulous garden displays! As excited as I get every year when I visit Seattle's Flower and Garden show gardens, I imagine the famous Chelsea show is all together on another level of excitement.
"Cha No Niwa Japanese Tea Garden" is amazing; Are those moss mounds under the maple?
Chavli

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