Grant-making charity Project Giving Back (PGB) will fund a further cohort of gardens for UK charities at RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2025, all of which will be permanently relocated after the show to continue to benefit the good causes that have inspired them.
October 23, 2024
PGB has funded 42 gardens to date and intends to fund up to 60 gardens for good causes at RHS Chelsea over five years, with 2025 being our penultimate year (applications for show garden funding in 2026 are now closed, with All About Plants garden applications closing on 4 November 2024.) Wide ranging benefits of exposure at RHS Chelsea are felt by the good causes PGB partners with, including increased funding, supporter engagement and public awareness of their services.
PGB’s 2025 cohort includes award-winning designers Jo Thompson, Joe Perkins, Thomas Hoblyn and Allon Hoskin and Robert Beaudin of Modular, alongside RHS Chelsea newcomers Nick Burton and Duncan Hall, who will all create show gardens to raise awareness of their partner charities.
Jo Thompson has designed a garden for The Glasshouse, a social enterprise that offers horticultural training and employment to women prisoners reaching the end of their custodial sentences. Joe Perkins is collaborating with The King’s Trust, the new name for The Prince’s Trust, on a garden that draws parallels between seeds and young people, showing their ability to thrive, even in the most inhospitable environments, given the right conditions.
The vital work of end of life care providers is the inspiration for Thomas Hoblyn’s garden for Hospice UK, which will be relocated to St Cuthbert’s Hospice in Durham following the show. Allon Hoskin and Robert Beaudin of Modular have designed a garden for Pathway, the charity that supports people who have experienced homelessness to access inclusive health care, and RHS Chelsea newcomers Nick Burton and Duncan Hall are working with Down’s Syndrome Scotland on a garden that celebrates the positive attributes of people with Down’s syndrome and highlighs the daily challenges people with the condition face.
All About Plants gardens will be announced in January 2025. Created by new-to-Chelsea designers, these smaller gardens will be in an outdoor location for the first time in 2025, having previously been staged inside the Great Pavilion.
Hattie Ghaui, CEO of Project Giving Back, says:
“We’re excited to be collaborating with another group of talented designers for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2025, helping to bring the vital work of many deserving causes into the spotlight. RHS Chelsea has always inspired innovative thinking about our green spaces and provides a unique platform to raise awareness. We are looking forward to seeing our 2025 gardens come to life and witnessing the ripple of positive impact they will create for the charities, both during the show and for the long term in their legacy locations.”
The show gardens announced today (22 October 2024) and supported by Project Giving Back in 2025 are:
*RHS Chelsea Flower Show runs from 21 - 25 May 2025.