Gardens Illustrated Magazine

Simply the best

All the gold-medal winning gardens at Chelsea are outstandin­g, but only one can be crowned Best in Show. We look at what makes one garden stand out from all the rest

- WORDS ANNIE GATTI

Find out what it takes to win the coveted title of Best in Show

Experience­d Chelsea designers walk down Main Avenue the evening before the medals are awarded and can usually predict the gold medal gardens. It’s trickier, though, to pick out Best in Show. On paper, this is the garden that has achieved the highest score on the judges’ checklist, which covers nine criteria, including design, spatial compositio­n, quality of the build and planting excellence. But what lifts one gold medal winner above another? Veteran Chelsea judge James Alexander-Sinclair explains: “You’re looking for new and exciting design, for someone who’s treating the rectangula­r plot slightly differentl­y. And you’re also looking for new and exciting planting.” There is no trick he can teach designers, he says. “The answer is just do everything really, really well – and do it better than the others.”

Andy Sturgeon, who won the accolade for the second time last year, observes that all of the recent Best in Show designers were given free reign by their sponsors and weren’t tied by a particular brief. For his 2016 garden, which certainly had both an original layout and refreshing­ly different planting, it was the sculptural fins that sparked the design, and the night before submitting it to sponsor The Telegraph and contractor­s Crocus Andy made a model (below) out of cardboard and plasticine. “This meant we could get

down at eye level and see all the views the judges, the public and the cameras would see,” he says. Initially he imagined woodland planting for the scheme but changed his mind when he remembered that this had been used widely in 2015. As the fins took shape, the garden started to feel hot and dry so he devised a shrubby, arid palette that would feature many plants he had never used before, and which he hoped would also be new to most of the judges.

The build was perhaps more complex than some of Andy’s previous gardens – the foundation­s had to be colossal, and the huge scale of the structures meant that everything had to be craned in – and a delay in the delivery of the stone meant that he was having to plant with the constructi­on team still on site. But his biggest challenge, surprising­ly, was the “embarrassm­ent of plants”.

“Almost everything succeeded and I had so many that it was hard to know what to use,” he admits. Even though they had a practice session at Crocus headquarte­rs during the build, Andy wasn’t sure

how the plants would speak to each other, until they assembled them on the garden. He spent many hours checking vistas, something he does with all his show gardens, to make sure there was a rich layering of foliage. He had placed two fins and a tree at the front to force people to walk down the side of the garden. “Some people just walk down Main Avenue and never see the views from the side or back. I go to great lengths to make all the views interestin­g.”

There’s no doubt that having an experience­d team of contractor­s is beneficial. Crocus has clocked up nine Best in Shows so far and this year is the choice of three-times gold medallist James Basson. For a designer knowing you can rely on such expertise leaves you time to perfect the planting. “Best in Show has to be a garden with a heart an nd soul,” says Andy. “But in the end, it comes down to planting. You havee to have it nailed to win. It has to be faultless.”

How did he feel when he had tweaked the last leaf, and the garden was ready for the final judging? Did it feel like a Best in Show contender? “I very clearly remember standing there and thinking there is nothing I would change.”

 ??  ?? Dan Pearson’s 2015 Best in Show garden for Laurent-Perrier emphasised spatial compositio­n and planting excellence. The highly designed artist’s studio on Phillip Johnson’s 2013 Best in Show, Trailfinde­rs Australian Garden was inspired by the petals of...
Dan Pearson’s 2015 Best in Show garden for Laurent-Perrier emphasised spatial compositio­n and planting excellence. The highly designed artist’s studio on Phillip Johnson’s 2013 Best in Show, Trailfinde­rs Australian Garden was inspired by the petals of...
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 ??  ?? The 2014 Best in Show garden designed by Luciano Giubbilei for Laurent-Perrier captured English romanticis­m with carefully controlled planting and colour.
The 2014 Best in Show garden designed by Luciano Giubbilei for Laurent-Perrier captured English romanticis­m with carefully controlled planting and colour.

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