Project Giving Back has announced that it will fund five more gardens to raise awareness of UK-based causes at RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2025, bringing the total number of gardens it is supporting this year to ten. These include all four gardens in the All About Plants category, as well as one additional show garden designed by Nigel Dunnett.
January 7, 2025
In the All About Plants category, four new-to-Chelsea designers will create smaller gardens with a focus on unusual plants and specialist nurseries. PGB has sponsored the All About Plants category since it was introduced to the show in 2022, but this year, for the first time, these gardens will be displayed in an outdoor location, having previously been staged inside the Great Pavilion.
Hattie Ghaui, CEO of Project Giving Back, says:
“We’re delighted to reveal five further deserving charities we are supporting this year by funding gardens that will be created at RHS Chelsea and then relocated to permanent locations after the show. Our 2025 cohort represents a diverse range of fascinating causes from across the UK and it is wonderful to see the imaginative ways in which the designers are bringing them to life through their garden designs. We’re particularly pleased that three of the ten gardens we are supporting are for Scotland-based charities, all of which will be relocated to Scotland after the show. We are proud of the geographical spread of PGB legacy gardens that is emerging, and hope to fill a few more gaps in our final year of funding gardens for good causes in 2026.”
The ADHD Foundation Garden designed by Katy Terry draws a parallel between the diversity of plant life and the unique strengths of neurodiverse individuals, inspired by the designer’s own ADHD diagnosis. The richly layered garden filled with unique trees, shrubs and plants that represent individuality inspires visitors to ‘think differently about thinking differently’.
Seawilding designed by Ryan McMahon incorporates a saltwater pool planted with seagrass, the UK’s only native ocean plant. The garden is inspired by the landscape of Loch Craignish on Scotland’s west coast, home to the Seawilding project. The rugged coastline is part of a rich marine environment where Seawilding is reintroducing two key species - seagrass and native oysters.
The Songbird Survival Garden designed by Nicola Oakey highlights how gardeners can support the UK’s declining songbird population, which has decreased a staggering 50% in the past two generations. It shows how people can make small changes in their own gardens and hopes to inspire the next generation of songbird champions.
The Wildlife Trusts’ British Rainforest Garden designed by Zoe Claymore evokes the lush, wet woodlands that once swathed vast areas of the west coast of the British Isles. It raises awareness of the Atlantic Rainforest Restoration Programme; a collaboration between The Wildlife Trusts and Aviva to bring British rainforests back to the western edge of the UK.
Joining the Main Avenue show garden line-up, The Hospitalfield Arts Garden is designed by Nigel Dunnett. It takes inspiration from the location of progressive arts development charity Hospitalfield on the east coast of Scotland, with its dramatic sand dune landscape, imagining an inspiring and creative setting for an artists’ studio.
Alex Denman, Trustee of Project Giving Back and Director of Royal Windsor Flower Show, said; “One of our aims has always been to fund gardens that allow charities of all shapes and sizes to showcase their work on the RHS Chelsea stage. In 2025 we have health, social justice, education, arts and nature-based charities all using the opportunity afforded by PGB to raise awareness and funds to bolster their causes into the future. In 2025 we are particularly pleased to see the unique and diverse landscapes of the British Isles step into the spotlight - from sea grass to lichen, sand dunes to rainforest - as we continue to push the conversation about how, as gardeners, we can support UK biodiversity recovery.”
PGB has funded 42 gardens at RHS Chelsea to date and intends to fund up to 60 gardens in total over the five years of the project. RHS Chelsea 2026 will be Project Giving Back’s final year and the application process is now closed.
RHS Chelsea Flower Show runs from 21 - 25 May 2025.