Chelsea Showstopper
AD Architectural Digest India|May - June 2018

Rajasthani craftsmanship meets Himalayan blooms in the first Indian garden at the Chelsea Flower Show, the result of a flourishing collaboration between the Piramal Group and landscape architect Sarah Eberle

Pallavi Pundir
Chelsea Showstopper

When it comes to spring, Swati Piramal knows exactly how to paint an idyllic picture: “Every flower of every colour is spring time,” she says, “It’s when the birds and flowers just sort of break out in joyous [song and] colours.” One could get used to that. The Mumbai-based vice chairperson and director of the Piramal Group has been creating swathes of paradise across the world, especially with her three-year-old Vaikunth Flower Show in Thane. In her sprawling Mahabaleshwar villa too, the crispy climes play perfect accomplice to her gardens. The real estate projects of Piramal Realty bear the markings of her passion, a drop of life in the urban desert. “That’s really made a difference to the sales, actually,” she says.

This story is from the May - June 2018 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.

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This story is from the May - June 2018 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.

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