Kew announces new Carbon Garden, set to open summer 2025

Release date: 21 February 2025

The new Carbon Garden at Kew Gardens
  • New permanent garden to open July 2025 at Kew Gardens
  • Original design tells the story of carbon, the scale of the climate crisis and how we can use nature to combat it 
  • Planting will boost biodiversity, while an illustrative soil profile and exposed coal seam reveal the hidden world of carbon underground
  • Stunning central installation inspired by fungi and created using natural materials
  • The Carbon Garden encourages visitors to become advocates for nature
  • Garden made possible by Biffa Award funding

This summer, Kew Gardens in London will unveil one of its most ambitious garden projects in recent years: the Carbon Garden. Opening in July 2025, this innovative new garden will not only showcase the essential role plants and fungi play in tackling climate change but will also highlight the urgent need to tackle the climate crisis.  The designs for this innovative new space are unveiled today, as work begins on the garden.

Designed as a permanent new garden within London’s largest UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Carbon Garden aims to reveal the invisible, bringing to life the critical role carbon plays in sustaining life on Earth, communicating the scale of the climate crisis, and sharing the extraordinary potential of the natural world to combat it.

What is carbon?
Quite literally ‘stardust’, carbon is formed in the furnace of stars and can be found in all living things. It exists in the air, it is dissolved into our oceans and rivers, it exists in organic matter in soils and is stored deep underground in sedimentary rocks and fossil fuels (99% of carbon on Earth is stored underground[i]). While human activities have released an alarming amount of carbon into the atmosphere, trapping heat and warming the planet, plants and fungi are our natural allies in climate repair, holding the power to capture carbon and restore balance. 

The Carbon Garden

  • Staged in a striking display inspired by climate stripes[1], a curated selection of herbaceous perennials illustrate the dramatic rise in global average temperatures over time. This powerful visual statement welcomes visitors into the garden, alongside a soil profile, a rocky outcrop and an exposed coal seam showing fossilized plants, highlighting the connection between plants and fossil fuels.
  • Delving into links between carbon emissions and climate change, a dry garden begins to showcase ways we can work together with plants to adapt to a changing climate. Here, drought-tolerant and Mediterranean plants from hotter climates will dominate – a startling contrast to the herbaceous planting, illustrative of the plants we might look to for London gardens in 30 years[i].
  • Nature offers hope through its extraordinary capacity to sequester and lock in carbon. At least 26 new trees will be planted, selected for their resilience to projected future climate conditions. Trees play a critical role in helping urban areas adapt to climate change thanks to the myriad of ecosystem services they offer, including absorption of carbon dioxide, shade and shelter provision, and improvement of air quality by filtering out pollutants. A rain garden and bioswale illustrate the ways we can manage water flow, prevent soil erosion, reduce flooding, recharge moisture into the soil and support moisture-tolerant plants that maintain soil stability and carbon storage.
  • Grasslands, wildflower meadows and native hedgerows will boost biodiversity, as biodiverse habitats are more resilient and better at storing carbon than monocultures.
  • Appearing to grow from the garden as a symbolic fungal fruiting body, a central pavilion designed by Mizzi Studio is inspired by the symbiotic relationship between the plant and fungal kingdoms, and is created using low-carbon, natural materials. A forward-tilted canopy directs rainwater into the rain garden, and sheltered space will support school visits and community activities.

The Carbon Garden encourages visitors to become advocates for nature, highlighting actions we can all take in our everyday lives to support the health of plants and the planet. 

Richard Wilford, designer of the Carbon Garden and Manager of Garden Design at RBG Kew says: ‘The Carbon Garden offers a unique opportunity to showcase our ongoing research, combining scientific insight with thoughtful design and beautiful planting to highlight the role of carbon in our lives, how it moves through the environment and how plants and fungi can help us tackle climate change. We hope the Carbon Garden inspires visitors to act and join us in shaping a more sustainable, resilient future for life on our planet.’

Kew Science and Horticulture
RBG Kew is leading cutting-edge research into carbon capture and the role plants play in mitigating climate change. Scientists at Wakehurst, Kew’s wild botanic garden in Sussex, are examining how various ecosystems, including grasslands and woodlands, contribute to carbon sequestration through a dynamic research programme, Nature Unlocked. This aims to inform conservation strategies and land management practices. 

Simultaneously, horticulturists and arboriculturists at Kew Gardens are researching the trees of the future, using Kew’s 11,000 trees to assess species resilience. These projects are working to determine which plants will not only thrive in a changing climate but also contribute to the mitigation of the climate crisis.

The Carbon Garden has been made possible thanks to funding from Biffa Award through the Landfill Communities Fund, funds raised by players of People’s Postcode Lottery, and generous philanthropy and donations. 

Rachel Maidment, Biffa Award Grants Manager, said: ‘We are immensely proud to support the Carbon Garden, which will educate and inspire visitors about the vital role of carbon in our environment. Through the Landfill Communities Fund, we are committed to funding projects that have a lasting positive impact on both people and the planet. We are particularly excited that this garden will not only showcase Kew’s research but will also serve as a hub for learning, demonstrating how collective action can drive real environmental change. Biffa Award is honoured to play a role in bringing this vision to life.’

Opening in July 2025, the Carbon Garden is a must-see attraction this summer at Kew Gardens which is celebrating everything that is wonderful about trees. Alongside The Power of Trees exhibition in the Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art, and Of the Oak, an inspiring outdoor installation by Marshmallow Laser Feast which explores the secrets of Kew’s magnificent Lucombe Oak, there are a host of ways to enjoy the wonder of Kew’s collections.

ENDS

Image credit: Mizzi Studio. Hi-res media images can be downloaded here.

For more information or images, please contact the Press Office at pr@kew.org

Notes to Editors 

About the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew 
The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew is a world-famous scientific and horticultural institution and conservation charity, whose mission is to understand and protect plants and fungi for the wellbeing of people and the future of all life on Earth. It is internationally respected for its outstanding collections, horticultural and scientific expertise in plant and fungal diversity, conservation and sustainable development in the UK and around the globe. Kew Gardens, with its 132 hectares of historic, landscaped gardens, is also a major attraction for international and London visitors alike. Dating back to 1759, the site has a rich history and was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site in July 2003. Combined visitor numbers with Wakehurst, Kew’s wild botanic garden in Sussex, total over 2.5 million per year. Wakehurst is home to the Millennium Seed Bank, the largest wild plant seed bank in the world and a safeguard against the disastrous effects of climate change and biodiversity loss. RBG Kew receives approximately one third of its funding from the UK Government through the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and research councils, with the remaining two thirds coming from supporters, sponsors, memberships and commercial activity including ticket sales. This enables RBG Kew to carry out its vital scientific and educational work. For tickets and membership options, please visit our website.  Since implementing a new accessibility scheme for those in receipt of Universal Credit, Pension Credit and Legacy Benefits, Kew has welcomed over 100,000 visitors with £1 tickets across both UK sites.  

Biffa Award:
Since 1997, Biffa Award has awarded grants totalling more than £189 million to thousands of worthwhile community and environmental projects across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The programme administers money donated by Biffa Group Ltd through the Landfill Communities Fund. www.biffa-award.org

Landfill Communities Fund:
The Landfill Communities Fund (LCF) is an innovative tax credit scheme enabling operators (LOs) to contribute money to organisations enrolled with ENTRUST as Environmental Bodies (EBs). EBs use this funding for a wide range of community and environmental projects in the vicinity of landfill sites. LOs are able to claim a credit (currently 5.3%) against their landfill tax liability for 90% of the contributions they make. Since its inception in 1996, over £1.6 billion has been spent on more than 56,000 projects across the UK. For further information please visit www.entrust.org.uk or see HMRC’s general guide to landfill tax.

Mizzi Studio 
Mizzi Studio is an interdisciplinary studio based in London, UK and Valletta, Malta, working across multiple sectors and scales. We design exceptional environments, buildings, infrastructure and transport for clients including governments, cultural and educational institutions and individuals. We are contextualist designers, fusing digital design with physical craft to create spaces that nourish the spirit, appeal to a human scale and inspire a sense of wonder. We believe in architecture’s power to make a positive social and environmental impact. Our mission is to craft a harmonious future through community, culture and climate.