Warwick Square is an award-winning Grade II-listed historic garden square, first laid out in the early 1840s by Thomas Cubitt. This is an all-season garden comprising a rose garden, formal bedding and lawn area with a mix of shrubs, herbaceous plants and seasonal ephemerals for colour, interest and fragrance. It won gold awards in London in Bloom from 2015 to 2025, and won Best Small Park 2022. Judges described how, “the sheer diversity of species will be enough to give the casual user enjoyment in the choice of flower, leaf form and scent, while the horticulturalist will be delighted by the vast array of unusual and specialist plants which have been carefully sourced... A gardeners’ delight – a structured hotchpotch from the everyday to the unusual and exotic." The garden was awarded the top Gold award in the Large Private Squares section of the London Garden Squares Competition 2023 and 2025.
Prize-winning three-acre garden square planned in 1828 by Thomas Cubitt (1788-1855). Over the past 30 years the whole garden has been replanted to give year-round interest.
Entry by ballot. Ballot winners can then book entry for two ticketholders, subject to availability. Ballot date TBA.
Distance (in straight line)
1.2 km / 0.8 miles
Open
Saturday 10:00–17:00
Sunday 10:00–17:00
One of London's largest residential rooftop gardens, spanning 29,000 sq ft and planted with 23,000 plants and 55 trees, offering inspiring views of the adjacent Grade II*-listed Power Station and London skyline.
Award-winning garden first laid out in the mid-19th century and redesigned after WWII. Judged the finest square garden in Chelsea in seven of the last 11 years.
Once a locked and derelict garden, now open for estate residents to enjoy and use. There are two areas - a kitchen garden, where residents grow herbs, berries and vegetables, and a woodland garden with a pond and a rose garden.
A shady garden with nine scheduled plane trees, interesting evergreens, variegated foliage and other shrubs and shade-loving plants. Convenient to visit with neighbouring Ennismore Gardens.