Chelsea 2024: A guide to the Octavia Hill Garden

Garden designer Ann-Marie Powelll is creating this year's Octavia Hill garden for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2024.

Published: April 26, 2024 at 1:24 pm

What would Octavia do? That’s the question Ann-Marie Powell asked herself in October 2022, when the National Trust chose her to create an exuberant, contemporary show garden inspired by Octavia Hill (1838-1912), a founder of the charity. “She was a pioneer – a forward-thinking, energetic, positive, amazing woman who was leaps and bounds ahead of her time,” says Ann-Marie. “Way back in the late 19th century, she was championing green space for heart and mind for people who needed it.”

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With this in mind, the scheme is a community garden created for an urban brownfield site, providing a place for people to come together and experience nature, as well as boost biodiversity in the city. Built around the concept of ‘open-air sitting rooms’, it features seating areas with views across colourful, bright, pollinator-friendly planting, including foxgloves and geraniums.

Ann-Marie Powell's garden by Rachel Warne
Ann-Marie Powell sits against a backdrop of Hemerocallis and Monarda ‘Scorpion’.

The main focal point is a large metal canopy – the one element keeping Ann-Marie up at night. “The structure is completely without foundations, so we are not using any concrete in the sub-base – it is cantilevered. There’s a canopy for shade and we’re going to grow climbers up it for wildlife habitat.”

Discover the full list of Show Gardens at Chelsea 2024

It’s an adventurous garden in other ways too, being split-level, with sloping paths accessible for wheelchair users or parents with a buggy, and it also features audio experiences for the visually impaired. Ann-Marie returns to the show after a hiatus of eight years. “I’ve done Chelsea before but never had a large show garden, so that makes me nervous,” she admits. “I hope that if Octavia were alive today she would give our ideas a big tick.” Designer Ann-Marie Powell. Sponsors Blue Diamond with The National Trust.

5 key elements

1. A steel-lattice canopy designed in the pattern of a dragonfly wing by architect Giles Jollands and fabricated in recyclable steel by Richard Weaver, the self-supporting structure offers shade and operates as a habitat for wildlife.

2. Hand-carved wooden seating created by master carver Kate Hanrahan (@kate_hananrahan_carver) from storm-fallen oak from National Trust woodlands.

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3. Wildlife features Ann-Marie has designed both a contemporary wildlife pond and ‘walkable’ stream, which provides a gentle sound of running water, as well as bird boxes in the trees.

4. Secret edimentals The planting includes good-looking edible plants that have been chosen for wildlife and foraging possibilities. They form just one part of Ann-Marie’s vibrant, adaptable, resilient community of plants.

5. Reclaimed materials Brick, stone and timber sourced from National Trust properties around the UK are being used throughout the garden in what Ann-Marie describes as a giant jigsaw.

• Find out more about Ann-Marie’s garden in our Talking Gardens podcast, available from mid May.

Theme A colourful community garden for people and wildlife on an old brownfield site. Contractors The Landscaping Consultants; soft landscaping by Location Landscapes. Plants Hortus Loci. After the show Blue Diamond’s Bridgemere Show Gardens, Cheshire. Contact ann-mariepowell.com

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