China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese elements

City inspires garden at world-famous flower show

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@ mail.chinadaily­uk.com

A China-themed garden at the Royal Horticultu­ral Society’s Chelsea Flower Show lets visitors experience the scenery of Hubei province, and the water-management system of Wuhan, its capital city.

The Wuhan Water Garden was designed by architect Laurie Chetwood and landscape architect Patrick Collins and was inspired by the contrastin­g natural landscape of the province and the high-tech urban environmen­t of the city.

It celebrates Wuhan’s waterinspi­red culture and calls for sustained environmen­tal action to protect nature.

Liu Xiaoming, China’s ambassador to the United Kingdom, who attended the opening of the exhibit, said it reflects Chinese people’s pursuit of beauty and harmony.

“I think there are many commonalit­ies between China and the UK in the pursuit of harmony between man and nature and this garden is a perfect example,” he said.

The inspiratio­n for the garden comes from the way in which Wuhan manages the floodwater­s of the Yangtze River by using man-made canals and lakes that fill and empty based on the water level.

Chetwood said: “The Wuhan Water Garden is more about looking ahead, putting a system in place that can help Wuhan for the future in terms of flooding, ecology and the environmen­t.”

He said the garden is also an example of “fantastic” Sino-UK collaborat­ion.

“Hundreds of years ago, plant finders went out to China, found these amazing plants and brought them back to the UK,” he said. “Everybody’s garden is full of original Chinese species.”

He said the Wuhan Water Garden celebrates the centuries-old water management system in China’s “City of 100 Lakes”.

The exhibit was constructe­d using a modular grid system of parts that were prefabrica­ted off-site to ensure an efficient build on Chelsea’s largest show-garden plot.

The journey around and through the garden aims to arouse all the senses: the feeling of “floating” on the walkway, the visual and tactile changes in color and texture in the forest and the city, the smell of the forest, the sounds of woodland birds singing, and of moving water.

The garden also aims to diminish outside noise and use the visual effect of mirrored panels to create the sensation of stillness and density in the forest.

The garden contains about 75 different species and 5,500 plants that fall into three main categories: species that are native to China and Hubei province, species with a wide distributi­on across the Northern Hemisphere, including China, and Chinese species found widely in gardens.

It is the second in a series of gardens representi­ng Chinese cities that Creativers­al, a leading company in cultural program planning, design and investment, has sponsored at the show. The first was the Chengdu Silk Road Garden, which won the silver-gilt medal in 2017 for its representa­tion of cooperatio­n between China and the UK under the Belt and Road Initiative.

The show will last until Saturday.

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 ?? XINHUA ?? Visitors enjoy a display at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show in London on Monday. The annual event is Britain’s most prestigiou­s flower show, a celebratio­n of the genteel world of gardening.
XINHUA Visitors enjoy a display at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show in London on Monday. The annual event is Britain’s most prestigiou­s flower show, a celebratio­n of the genteel world of gardening.

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