91µ¼º½

RHS Chelsea Flower Show

Showground installations

Flourishing amid the gardens, see all of the RHS Chelsea Flower Show displays of floral creativity and wonder. These displays are not judged for medals.

RHS letters

RHS Letters

Designed by Rachel Kennedy,

This year’s RHS Letters installation is lighting up the Royal Hospital grounds with a vibrant burst of tropical colour. This kaleidoscopic composition brings together some 5,000 flowers – including a number of unusual varieties of Protea and Heliconia – their bright and harmonious tones colliding to create an enchanting ombré effect. The movement of colour through the installation is rhythmic, bold and organic, transforming the static frames of the RHS Letters into vital carriers of life.

Showground planting

Designed by

Inspired by the energy of the Show and the RHS’s commitment to biodiversity and sustainability, Sam’s vibrant planting celebrates the seasonal crescendo of May, combining bold foliage, dynamic colour, and pollinator-rich plantings to create a cohesive visual and ecological link between the Show Gardens and the surrounding landscape. Designed to be both impactful and replicable, the scheme balances resilience with beauty, supporting pollinators and enhancing the showground’s ecological legacy while offering visitors an engaging and inspiring feast for the eyes. 

RHS Chelsea showground planting

RHS Hub

RHS Hub

Designed by

The RHS Hub garden is a verdant woodland space, an ephemeral natural haven. After the Show, this lush planting, with its white-stemmed birch trees, textural ferns and dappled canopy, will be relocated to the churchyard of Matthew’s House, in the heart of Swansea. There, these plants will from the botanical basis of an improved green space, providing access to nature for guests of Matthew’s House who are struggling with homelessness, as well as members of the wider community.

A Karoo Succulent Garden

Designed by Katie Lewis & Ernst van Jaarsveld, The Newt in Somerset

The garden showcases sculptural succulents, indigenous to South Africa, set in an evocation of their semi-desert habitat. The Karoo Succulent Garden showcases a few unique microclimates and the extraordinary, resilient plants that each sustains. Visitors can explore shimmering quartz fields, a quiver tree forest on a shale hill, and take in native species from butter bush to fan aloes. Shaped by hardship born of drought, these waterwise plants thrive in the face of adversity. Designed to resonate and inspire as the world gets warmer, there’s much to learn here for the modern gardener. 

Karoo succulent garden

Tattie Isles

Tattie Isles

Designed by , Sponsored by 

Embellishing the beautiful structure of the Bull Ring Gate is a thought-provoking and dynamic installation where scent, gentle colour and movement transport visitors to a wild riverbank. Designed to highlight the fragility and plight of a keystone species – wild Atlantic salmon – now endangered in Great Britain, the display draws sensitively on streamside symbolism. 

Three Coverings

Designed by Darcey Fleming and . Sponsored by

Abstract sculptures occupy a garden evocative of the British countryside. The brightly coloured woven works are made from discarded baling twine, donated by farmers living locally to Fleming in Oxfordshire and Berkshire. To create her sculptural forms, Darcy embarks on a repetitive ‘building’ practice – a self-developed weaving process which involves stretching and unravelling the twine to produce masses of material. 

Three coverings

Hats off to the remarkable

Hats off to the remarkable!

Designed by . Sponsored by .

This year’s London Gate installation celebrates the relaunch of heritage biscuit maker Thomas Fudge’s. A decadent floral display celebrates the curiosity and desire to explore elevated experiences, influenced by Thomas Fudge’s dandy persona, towering columns of playful plants and colourful flowers are arranged to create a showstopping entrance, complete with the Thomas Fudge’s signature top hats. 

RHS x UBS: Moments of Reflection

Designed by . Sponsored by .

This immersive installation around The Monument in the Great Pavilion celebrates the work of British nurseries, drawing on the grounding effect of a walk in nature, and the humbling insignificance we might feel in the presence of majestic mountains or ancient woodlands. Clever planting alludes to a host of living landscapes, with each environment designed to evoke a different emotion. Visitors are invited to stroll among manicured avenues of clipped hedging and a formal water rill, then wander into verdant woodlands, momentarily ascend into the Highlands, take a brief pause at a rambler’s rest to admire tender plants, before finishing at a vibrant herbaceous border. A true collaborative effort, the walk through experience brings together four expert nurseries – , , and – with additional trees, topiary and herbaceous planting from .

The Monument installation

Floral installations

The Great Pavilion houses even more spectacular displays which look and smell delicious

The Chelsea Punk

The Chelsea Punk

Created by Chelsea in Bloom. Florist .

Part of the neighbourhood’s Chelsea in Bloom event, themed on ‘Flowers in Fashion’, this dazzling 4m-tall punk with colourful mohawk celebrates Chelsea’s legacy as the birthplace of the British punk scene. Old images of the King’s Road where Dame Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren had their famous punk shop decorate the wirework head, plus anarchy badges, safety pins and tartan tones in playful floral form. 

Orchidelirium

Created by .

Inspired by the Victorian frenzy of ‘orchidelirium’, this ambitious overhead display is something of a full-circle moment for the florist, whose own journey with flowers began in the lab, with a plant microbiology degree and a thesis on the evolution of orchid reproduction. Here, blurring the lines between science, storytelling and spectacle, his hanging installation recalls a time when these exotic blooms drove collectors to near obsession, inviting a modern audience to rediscover the wondrous world of orchids in RHS Chelsea Flower Show’s new Orchid Zone. 

Orchidelerium

Gold medal winner

Ebb and Bloom

Ebb and Bloom: Textures of Wellbeing

Created by . Supported by .

This immersive, sensory and ambitious floral sculpture explores the synergy between mental wellbeing, floristry and sea swimming. Handcrafted willow structures form dynamic, wave-like shapes revealing something new from every angle – even a hidden heart. It features abundant blooms in blues, purples, whites and peach-pink with layers of textural botanicals of spiky thistles, soft gypsophila, velvet roses and fragrant rosemary and lavender. 

Colour My World with Happiness and Harmony

Created by .

This vibrant display, featuring large willow globes woven locally from heritage varieties, is dressed in a vibrant array of flowers and foliage representing how floristry becomes a creative portal to a world of possibility. Graduating colour draws the eye through the design, and contrasting textural cubes symbolise the diversity and differing perspectives of our world. 

Colour my World

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