Back

Small Gardens with Big Impact: RHS Chelsea Gardens Championing Biodiversity, Creativity and Inclusive Design

A further fifteen RHS Chelsea Flower Show gardens have been unveiled in the All About Plants and Balcony and Container categories, homing in on how smaller spaces can assist in the conservation of local wildlife at home, while also highlighting how our gardens can provide excellent spaces for developing our passions, interests and improving our own physical health.

In the All About Plants category, the Woodland Trust: Forgotten Forests Garden by Ashleigh Aylett will indicate to visitors how ancient woodlands are at a critical juncture for recovery. The garden will feature a transitional zone where conifers give way to a diverse, naturally regenerating woodland with incredible biodiversity, demonstrating how ancient woodlands can re-emerge from plantation sites with careful stewardship.
 
Showing how easy it is to grow plants that attract prey essential to bats’ diets, Melanie Hick is designing The Bat Conservation Trust’s Nocturnal Garden. Naturalistic planting will encourage small insects that bats feast on after dark, encouraging bats to enjoy gardens at night while we enjoy them in the day. ‘The Bat’ percolates to every part of the garden, including colour and shape, and even the rear boundary of the garden will be made to come apart and made into bat boxes on relocation.
 
Charlie Chase is looking to inspire young people and offer a restorative, purposeful community space at a time of youth mental health emergency with their YoungMinds Garden. Framed by a habitat wall that is made from stone offcuts, the garden offers enclosure whilst promoting an ecological approach to garden creation. Plant diversity throughout the garden reflects the range of experiences young people bring.
 
The Plant Heritage Missing Collector Garden by Sally-Anne Rees, Kate Campbell and William Murray is inspired by the idea of "The Missing Collector"; a mysterious plant enthusiast who has left behind an extraordinary plant collection. Jewel-toned plants set within lush green foliage offer visitors a rare glimpse into this treasured botanical collection while an unoccupied chair invites visitors to imagine themselves in the role of collector and guardian.
 
Seeking to inspire visitors to separate from technology and return to hobbies to nourish minds and wellbeing, Cleary Gottlieb: Time for Creativity by Christina Cobb creates a softer landscaped garden. A walkthrough glasshouse stocked with books, paints, papers and fabrics welcomes visitors, travelling through into a peaceful seating area with vibrant planting and seating in which they can carry out these activities.
 
The Balcony and Container Gardens category will also explore how our gardens can be both passions for nature and other personal interests. Featuring The Seasalt Painted Garden by Lynn James – taking from mid-century modern artists known as the St Ives School, the garden is set within a courtyard adjoining an artist’s studio. Blending bold colours with recycled materials, the garden echoes artists’ need for ingenuity and resourcefulness.
 
For its 140th birthday, The Whittard of Chelsea Garden by Ollie Pike will join nature and tea together to create a perfect sanctuary set in a Chelsea courtyard. Rich in fragrance and colour, the planting features many of the ingredients used in Whittard infusions. Also taking inspiration from a popular drink and taking its name from the liquid lost to evaporation during whisky aging, Fettercairn: The Angels' Share by May Starey, features grassland that moves to woodland across the balcony around a flexible space designed for sharing, reminiscent of Fettercairn’s home in the Cairngorms.
 
A Little Garden of Shared Knowledge sponsored by Viking by Katerina Kantalis has been thoughtfully designed for a well-travelled, retired creative couple. Serving as both a private sanctuary and a welcoming space for friends and family to share a love of gardening, with a curated selection of flowers, herbs, vegetables, and fruit arranged within a compact layout. The Transient Garden by Rebecca Lloyd Jones centres on flexibility and adaptability. This reflects the increasingly temporary and mobile nature of modern living, all elements are modular, lightweight, and designed to be moved by two people.
 
Focussing on how gardens can be used in aiding rehabilitation, the Alzheimer’s Society: Microbes and Minds Garden by Tina Worboys is inspired by the rural orchards of Worcestershire and Herefordshire. The garden tells the story of apple cider vinegar and its gut health benefits. At the centre of the garden is an apple tree representing ‘The Mother’ – a naturally occurring bacteria formed during fermentation. Inclusion, accessibility and belonging are the key themes of the The Sightsavers Garden: we start with sight but we don't stop there by Peter Karn, Janice Molyneux and Sarah Fisher. Natural materials, multi-sensory planting and a central wheelchair turning circle welcome all visitors, inviting them to slow down, pause, connect; and to imagine a more inclusive and sustainable world.
 
Inspired by the designers’ love of British hedgerows, and concern for their decline, Hedgerow in the Sky - Tech Mahindra by Sarah Mayfield and Monika Greenhough invites visitors to notice local wildlife and nurture biodiversity. Featuring a backdrop made of Shou Sugi Ban, an ancient Japanese wood preservation technique, the urban balcony creates a dark and striking shape with layered planting that mimics the structure of hedgerows. From the sky to the water, Tales from the Riverbank Garden sponsored by Kennedys' Independent Property Agents by Susie Kennedy and Kate Henning imagines a balcony as a fully functioning garden set on a floating home. As more people take to longboat living, the garden features a dipping tank, cooking area and edible plants on the boat roof.
 
Finally, Flood Re: Contain the Rain Garden by John Howlett is an urban inner-city garden inspired by traditional Persian, Moorish and Islamic design. Offering a tranquil space that sees sustainable and practical water management, the lush planting will keep the garden cool in hotter temperatures and the permeable surfaces with water storage will help manage excess rainwater.
 
Project Giving Back, the unique grant-giving charity that supports gardens for good causes at RHS Chelsea, is supporting four of this year’s All About Plants Gardens.
 
RHS Chelsea Flower Show runs from 19-23 May 2026 and tickets are available online at rhs.org.uk/chelsea.

Notes to editors

Show garden exhibitor lists are available on the RHS Media Centre here: https://www.rhs.org.uk/press/shows/chelsea
 
Show garden images can be downloaded from this link: RHS/Iris
 
All About Plants Gardens 2026
Woodland Trust: Forgotten Forest Garden by Ashleigh Aylett
Sponsor: Project Giving Back
Contractor: CJ Landscapes
 
Cleary Gottlieb: Time for Creativity by Christina Cobb
Sponsor: Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP
Contractor: Shovel + Spade Landscaping
 
The Bat Conservation Trust’s Nocturnal Garden by Melanie Hick
Sponsor: Project Giving Back
Contractor:  Phil Sutton
 
The Plant Heritage Missing Collector Garden by Kate Campbell, Sally-Anne Rees & William Murray
Sponsor: Project Giving Back
Contractor: Crowton Rowarth Ltd
 
YoungMinds Garden by Charlie Chase
Sponsor: Project Giving Back
Contractor: TBC
 
Balcony & Container Gardens 2026
The Seasalt Painted Garden by Lynn James
Sponsor: Seasalt
Contractor: Cobham Court Landscaping
 
The Whittard of Chelsea Garden by Ollie Pike
Sponsor: Whittard of Chelsea
Contractor: Peak Landscapes and Yorkshire Water Features
 
Alzheimer’s Society: Microbes and Minds Garden by Tina Worboys
Sponsor: Alzheimer's Society
Contractor: Big Fish Landscapes
 
The Sightsavers Garden: we start with sight but we don't stop there by Peter Karn, Janice Molyneux and Sarah Fisher
Sponsor: Belonging Forum
Contractor: Castle Landscapes
 
Fettercairn: The Angels' Share by May Starey
Sponsor: Fettercairn Whisky
Contractor: TBC
 
A Little Garden of Shared Knowledge sponsored by Viking by Katerina Kantalis
Sponsor: Viking
Contractor: Phil Sutton Landscapes Ltd.
 
The Transient Garden by Rebecca Lloyd Jones
Sponsor: Garden Club London
Contractor: Garden Club London
 
Hedgerow in the Sky - Tech Mahindra by Sarah Mayfield & Monika Greenhough
Sponsor: Tech Mahindra
Contractor: Cobham Court Landscaping

Tales from the Riverbank Garden sponsored by Kennedys' Independent Property Agents by Susie Kennedy & Kate Henning
Sponsor: Kennedys' Independent Property Agents
Contractor: Big Fish Landscapes
 
Flood Re: Contain the Rain Garden by John Howlett
Sponsor: Flood Re
Contractor: Acacia Gardens
 
RHS Chelsea Flower Show: 19 – 23 May 2026
18 May: Press Preview (accreditation opens from January 2026)
8am-8pm, 19 – 20 May: RHS members only
8am – 8pm, 21 – 23 May: RHS members and public
5.30pm – 10pm, 22 May: (Friday Late Event) RHS members and public
8am – 5.30pm, 23 May: RHS members and public
 
Venue: Royal Hospital Chelsea, Royal Hospital Road, London SW3 4SR
 
Ticket prices vary and RHS members receive discount prices. Book here: rhs.org.uk/chelsea
 
About the RHS
We’re the UK’s gardening charity, helping people and plants to grow.
 
Our mission is to be there on people’s lifelong journey with gardening – to bring happiness, health, stronger communities and a thriving natural world.
 
With 220 years of experience, we support gardeners of all ages with expert advice, community and schools projects, scientific research, professional qualifications, our five RHS Gardens, and events including the iconic RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
 
For more information visit www.rhs.org.uk
 
RHS Registered Charity No. 222879/SC038262

Get involved

The RHS is the UK’s gardening charity, helping people and plants to grow - nurturing a healthier, happier world, one person and one plant at a time.