Over 20 million seeds have been sown in the moat at the Tower of London, as work continues apace to create a spectacular floral Superbloom display to celebrate Her Majesty The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee this summer.
With favourable weather, the bloom will begin to flourish at the beginning of June, encircling the Tower with a vibrant field of flowers and creating a welcoming new habitat for wildlife in the urban landscape of the City of London. The Superbloom will then evolve throughout the summer, becoming a haven for pollinators and creating a stunning spectacle of changing colours and patterns, flowering until September.
The seeds, sown by a team from Pictorial Meadows, have been carefully selected by Nigel Dunnett, Professor of Planting Design and Urban Horticulture at the University of Sheffield, who is the lead horticulturist on the project and who designed the planting scheme. Nigel has meticulously created a series of colour-themed seed mixes that will merge to produce beautiful, magical and dramatic impressionistic visual effects across the moat, whilst simultaneously delivering small-scale sparkle and detail.
These mixes feature different varieties of many familiar wildflowers, such as red poppies, yellow corn marigolds, and blue cornflowers. In addition to the wildflowers, a range of garden plants are also included in the seed mixes to heighten the colour effects and to extend the season of flowering to cover the whole summer, before and after the wildflowers reach their peak. Sunflowers, cosmos and rudbeckias will flower into early autumn, and the snapdragon-like fairy toadflax, and baby’s breath will bloom at the beginning of the summer.
Taller plants will create a wonderful, totally immersive experience for visitors, and the millions of simple, uncomplicated flowers in the Superbloom will be a wonderful source of food and nectar for pollinators.
Extensive landscape work has already taken place in the Tower’s moat to prepare for the display. Winding paths, designed by the project’s landscape architects, Grant Associates, have been installed and are being lined with woven willow edging. A willow sculpture, made by artist Spencer Jenkins, already occupies the moat’s north-east corner, offering a beautiful vantage point to view the display and Tower Bridge. Finally, over the past three months, 10,000 metric tonnes of soil have been deposited in the moat via a huge conveyor belt, which will move out as the seeds finally move in.
Tom O’Leary, Director of Public Engagement, Historic Royal Palaces, said:
“Creating Superbloom is the result of an incredible collaboration, and has been years in the planning. However, as the seeds go in the earth, we are now directly collaborating with nature – which we hope will look kindly on us as we wait for the flowers to burst into life for June!”
Nigel Dunnett, Professor of Planting Design and Urban Horticulture, University of Sheffield, said:
“The Superbloom is without doubt the most thrilling project that I have been involved with. It has been a real combination of art and science to develop the final planting scheme for the moat, and I can’t wait to follow the seeds’ progress, from the first green shoots emerging within weeks, through to the full spectacle of the amazing ocean of flowers filling the moat in the summer.”
Sue France, Technical Director, Pictorial Meadows said:
“Pictorial Meadows is proud to have been chosen as the seed supplier and installer for this project.
“Our specialist team worked at pace to prepare these stunning bespoke seed mixes in our Sheffield seed testing and mixing centre, and have sown them in record time. Our reputation for bold colour and fantastic reliability, alongside our 20 years of experience in creating stunning urban meadows, make us the trusted choice for organisations and individuals across the UK and beyond.”
Andrew Grant RDI, Founder and Director, Grant Associates, said:
“All of the designers and contractors involved in the creation of the Superbloom to date have been focused on providing the perfect seedbed for a spectacular flower display this summer. Now all we can do is eagerly watch and wait for the first germination and healthy grow over the next two months, as our vision starts to become a reality.”
Historic Royal Palaces is made up from people who love and look after six of the most wonderful palaces in the world, creating space for spirits to stir and be stirred and where everyone can feel welcome and accepted.
The organisation promotes the stories about the monarchs we know and the lives of those we don’t, letting people explore and set their minds racing. Historic Royal Palaces is a charity relying on public support to give the palaces a future, for everyone.
For more information visit www.hrp.org.uk