يحاول ذهب - حر
Expert advice How gardens will look in 2050
June 28, 2025
|Western Morning News (Saturday)
Smart innovations and changes in planting will transform gardens in the future, as HANNAH STEPHENSON finds
-

DROUGHT-TOLERANT species, Mediterranean trees, smart improvements and vertical growing are likely to dominate our gardens by 2050, garden designer Kitti Kovacs is predicting.
Kitti is creating Illusion 2050, a garden of the future, in a new category Gardens Of Curiosity at this year’s RHS Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival, showcasing how gardeners can adapt to climate change while maintaining beauty and biodiversity.
She cites a report by Kew Gardens in 2024 warning that more than 50 per cent of its trees, including oak, beech and holly, could be at risk by 2090 and calling on the horticulture industry and urban planners to increase diversity of trees and shrubs.
"They are looking for solutions, for replacements for these trees and shrubs which may become nonexistent because they can't cope with climate change - and we need to follow the same principles," she says. "Everyone can do their bit."
So, where will we be by 2050?
"We will be more aware of sustainable materials which are sustainably sourced, we will reuse things, repurpose materials and will be going back to natural materials," she says. "Plants we are using will be low maintenance."
SMART INNOVATION
Smart lighting which is wildlifefriendly, rain-monitoring irrigation systems and apps which provide information at your fingertips will become more prevalent as an aid to gardeners, she predicts.
"By 2050 we will have systems where a garden designer would create your plant list which is stored in a computer system which decides which plant should be watered at which time of the day."
هذه القصة من طبعة June 28, 2025 من Western Morning News (Saturday).
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Western Morning News (Saturday)

Western Morning News (Saturday)
Yeo Valley opens for first festival
Mid September sees a new organic garden festival happening here in the West
2 mins
August 30, 2025

Western Morning News (Saturday)
Judi Spiers on Saturday
Read Judi's column every week in the Western Morning News
2 mins
August 30, 2025
Western Morning News (Saturday)
Down to the roots
HANNAH STEPHENSON FINDS OUT WHAT A MANGELWURZEL IS AND HOW TO GROW IT
2 mins
August 30, 2025
Western Morning News (Saturday)
Shops and roads shut as flash flooding batters towns
HEAVY rain resulted in roads flooding and shops being forced to shut yesterday because of the damage, with more showers forecast this weekend.
2 mins
August 30, 2025
Western Morning News (Saturday)
Excitement builds for festival packed with Cornish produce
A FIVE-DAY celebration of Cornwall's finest food and drink is coming to Truro, offering the 'ultimate taste experience' right in the heart of the city.
1 mins
August 30, 2025
Western Morning News (Saturday)
Trust hosts Helios to fire imaginations
A HUGE new artwork inspired by the sun is coming to Plymouth next month.
2 mins
August 30, 2025
Western Morning News (Saturday)
Angels delight
MARION MCMULLEN discovers how the hospital drama Angels became appointment viewing 50 years ago
1 mins
August 30, 2025
Western Morning News (Saturday)
Excellent prices achieved in July
MICHAEL BOWMAN, CHUDLEIGH
1 min
August 30, 2025
Western Morning News (Saturday)
Get on your bike to enjoy the natural beauty of the Exe Trail
Martin Hesp enjoys a wonderful day out next to one of Devon's most beautiful estuaries
5 mins
August 30, 2025

Western Morning News (Saturday)
Documentary bridges courage of the past and present hope
A WARD-WINNING Cornish film company Awen Productions is launching a new documentary film called 'Gentle, Angry Women' which follows the story of three young activists as they retrace the footsteps of the Greenham Common march to the original site of the 1980s Women's Peace Camp.
2 mins
August 30, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size