The Campaign to Protect Rural England Garden: ‘On the Edge’ was awarded RHS Chelsea Garden of the Year and a Gold Medal at the 2026 RHS Chelsea Flower Show. The garden is sponsored by Project Giving Back.
Landscape architecture by Sarah Eberle
This year’s RHS Chelsea Garden of the Year turns its attention to a landscape most of us pass without a second thought.
Designed by Sarah Eberle for the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE), On the Edge explores the edgelands – overlooked strips of countryside that sit between towns and rural landscapes, places often dismissed as wasteland, yet rich in ecological and social value.
Created during CPRE’s centenary year, the garden offers a hopeful vision of how these spaces can be protected, restored and appreciated as part of everyday life.
In between worlds
Set on an imagined edgelands, Sarah’s garden blurs the boundaries between the built and natural worlds. At its centre lies a powerful sculptural figure representing Gaia, or Mother Nature, carved from the trunk of a fallen tree. One hand reaches towards a shallow pool, while willow branches form flowing hair that becomes part of a dry-stone wall winding through the landscape.
The effect is both mythical and grounded – a reminder that even damaged landscapes can continue to support life, renewal and connection.


Inspired by the ordinary
Rather than relying on showy floral displays, Sarah’s planting palette celebrates the textures and rhythms of native British and Irish species.
Buttercups, hawthorn, hazel and other plants often overlooked or dismissed as weeds are woven through the scheme, creating a layered, naturalistic landscape rich in habitat value. Colour appears sparingly, allowing foliage, seedheads and form to take centre stage.
Adding another layer to the story are naturalised garden plants imagined to have arrived through years of illegal dumping of waste. Here, neglect is transformed into abundance, reflecting the resilience often found in these edge landscapes.
Sending a message
The garden highlights a growing concern for rural land on the fringes of towns and cities – some of the most contested landscapes in the country and often the first to be lost to development.
Yet these spaces are also where many people encounter nature most frequently. Whether walking a dog, cycling to work or taking a shortcut home, they provide accessible connections to wildlife and open space close to where people live.
Through On the Edge, CPRE hopes to encourage a renewed appreciation for these everyday landscapes and the role they play in supporting both biodiversity and wellbeing.


Beyond the show
Like many Chelsea gardens, On the Edge was conceived with a future beyond the showground.
Following Chelsea, the garden will be relocated to Park Hill in Sheffield as part of a regenerative community project. The move feels particularly fitting: Sheffield was home to CPRE’s first branch and remains closely connected to the organisation’s history.
There, the garden’s central message – that nature can thrive when given space and care – will continue to evolve long after the Show has packed up.
Plant palette
Key plants
- Echium candicans (pride of Madeira)
- Cephalanthus occidentalis (button bush)
- Rosa banksiae lutescens (climbing yellow rose)
- Melica uniflora f. Alba (wood melick)
- Ranunculus acris (meadow buttercup)
Trees & shrubs
- Acer campestre (field maple)
- Acer monspessulanum (Montpelier maple)
- Betula pendula (silver birch)
- Carpinus betulus (common hornbeam)
- Cephalanthus occidentalis (button bush)
- Corylus avellana (hazel)
- Cornus sanguinea (common dogwood)
- Crataegus monogyna (common hawthorn)
- Hedera arborescens (tree ivy)
Climbers & roses
- Rosa banksiae ‘Lutea’
- Rosa x odorata ‘Mutabilis’ (tea rose)
- Rosa canina
- Rosa pimpinellifolia
- Rosa serica subsp. Omeiensis f. pteracantha
Perennials/main planting
- Ajuga reptans ‘Alba’ (white bugle)
- Angelica archangelica
- Anthriscus sylvestris (cow parsley)
- Carex morrowii ‘Irish Green’
- Daucus carota (wild carrot)
- Digitalis spp. (foxglove)
- Euphorbia amygdaloides var. robbiae
- Geranium spp.
- Geum rivale
- Iris spp.
- Liriope muscari ‘Big Blue’
- Muehlenbeckia complexa ‘Big Leaf’
- Papaver somniferum (opium poppy)
- Polygonatum ‘Giganteum’ (Solomon’s seal)
- Primula bulleyana
- Ranunculus spp.
- Sedum spp.
- Silene dioica
Full planting list here
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After being showcased at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, this garden will be relocated to a regenerated housing development in urban Sheffield, where the legacy of early campaigners will live on as a dynamic and thriving place with nature at its heart.
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Sarah Eberle is an internationally acclaimed landscape designer renowned for her naturalistic, innovative “fusion style” gardens. A multiple award-winning designer worldwide, she has received numerous RHS Gold Medals and Best in Show accolades for her exhibition gardens, alongside prestigious honours for her private client work. Recognised in 2022 as one of the landscape industry’s three most influential figures, Sarah creates distinctive, nature-led landscapes that unite artistic vision with a deep understanding of place and client aspirations.
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More RHS Chelsea Flower Show Gardens here





