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Bath firm to design garden at Tower of London to mark Queen's Jubilee

The garden will draw on the colours, shapes and motifs of the Queen’s 1953 coronation gown

Bath-based Grant Associates is developing a garden to mark the Queen's Jubilee(Image: Grant Associates)

A Bath landscape and architecture company has announced it is designing a special garden to mark the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

The ‘Queen’s Garden’ will be created at the Tower of London this summer as part of Historic Royal Palaces’ Superbloom display in celebration of the Queen’s 70-year reign.

The concept for the garden is being developed by Andrew Grant and James Clarke of Grant Associates, which is based on Milk Street in the city.

According to the duo, the design will draw on the colours, shapes and motifs employed by famed British couturier Sir Norman Hartnell for the Queen’s 1953 coronation gown.

A lawned area known as the Tower’s Bowling Green will be transformed into a garden featuring meadow flowers, topiary and summer-flowering perennials, bulbs and ornamental grasses.

The layout of the space – with its concentric scalloped hedging – is intended to represent the tiers of embroidery which feature on the gown’s silk skirt, according to Grant Associates.

Nigel Dunnett, the lead horticulturalist for Superbloom, has selected shrubs such as lavender, santolina and brachyglottis greyi to frame a mix of summer flowers, hinting at the gold bugle beads, pearls and diamante on the gown.

Andrew Grant, founder and director of Grant Associates, said: “The design of the gown suggested a geometry and basic colour scheme for the garden whilst the embroidered flowers, representing multiple nations, offered a sense of the richness and diversity of Superbloom."