Around the World in 80 Gardens
| Around the World in 80 Gardens |
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| Genre |
Documentary |
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| Starring |
Monty Don |
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| No. of episodes |
10 |
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| Production |
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| Producer(s) |
BBC |
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| Running time |
10 × 1 hour |
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| Release |
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| Original network |
BBC Two |
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| Original release |
27 January 2008 – 30 March 2008 |
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Around the World in 80 Gardens was a television series of 10 programmes in which British gardener and broadcaster Monty Don visited 80 of the world's most celebrated gardens. The series was filmed over a period of 18 months and was first broadcast on BBC Two at 9.00pm on successive Sundays from 27 January to 30 March 2008. A book based on the series was also published.
The title of the series was a reference to Jules Verne's novel Around the World in Eighty Days and is a spiritual successor to Dan Cruickshank's earlier television series, Around the World in 80 Treasures, first broadcast in 2005.
Mexico and Cuba
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 1. | Mexico | The Floating Gardens, Xochimilco, Mexico City | The chinampas of Lake Xochimilco, floating vegetable gardens dating back before Aztec times. |
| 2. | Mexico | The Gardens of Luis Barragán: Casa de Luis Barragán, Casa Prieto López and Casa Antonio Gálvez | Gardens created by leading Mexican architect, Luis Barragán, in Mexico City. Website of the Barragan Foundation |
| 3. | Mexico | The Ethno-Botanical Garden, Oaxaca | A new botanic garden containing the region's many species of cactus, built alongside the Santo Domingo Cultural Center, formerly a monastery, on a site originally slated for development as a hotel. Website |
| 4. | Mexico | Las Pozas, Xilitla | A surreal collection of jungle plants and concrete follies created in a former coffee plantation by Englishman Edward James in the Sierra Madre Oriental. Website |
| 5. | Cuba | Alberto's Huerto, Havana | An urban vegetable garden in the space left by a collapsed building. |
| 6. | Cuba | Vivero Organopónico Alamar, Havana | A large urban collective organic market garden (Organopónico) |
| 7. | Cuba | Maria's Garden, Havana | A small urban flower garden. |
Australia and New Zealand
Starting with Botany Bay...
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 8. | Australia | The Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney | Botanic gardens around Farm Cove at the centre of Sydney, on the site of a grain farm established by the first European settlers in 1788. Website |
| 9. | Australia | Kennerton Green, Mittagong, New South Wales | A colonial-style garden with European planting in the hills near Sydney. |
| 10. | Australia | The Sitta Garden, Sydney | A modern garden designed by Vladimir Sitta, including native plants and large slabs of red rock from central Australia. |
| 11. | Australia | Alice Springs Desert Park, Northern Territory | A park near Alice Springs recreating the habitats for desert plants across central Australia. Website |
| 12. | Australia | Cruden Farm, Langwarrin, Melbourne | Gardened continuously by Dame Elisabeth Murdoch since the 1920s.[1] |
| 13. | Australia | The Garden Vineyard, Moorooduc, Melbourne | A European-style garden on the Mornington Peninsula, replacing European planting with Australian natives. Website |
| 14. | New Zealand | Ayrlies Garden, Auckland | A 12-acre (49,000 m2) country garden created since 1964 in a paddock east of Auckland by Beverley McConnell. Website |
| 15. | New Zealand | Te Kainga Marire, New Plymouth | A domestic city garden of native New Zealand plants. Its name is Māori for "the peaceful encampment". Website |
India
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 16. | India | Taj Mahal and the Mehtab Bagh, Agra | Website, Garden Visit review. |
| 17. | India | Akbar's Tomb, Sikandra | |
| 18. | India | The Monsoon Garden, Deeg | Gardens of the Deeg Palace. Garden Visit review |
| 19. | India | Jal Mahal, Jaipur | |
| 20. | India | Hindu Temple Shrine Garden, Jaipur | |
| 21. | India | Mr Abraham's Spice Garden, Thekkady, Kerala | An organic spice garden. Website |
| 22. | India | The Old Railway Garden, Munnar, Kerala | |
| 23. | India | The Rock Garden, Chandigarh | A sculpture garden created illegally by transport official Nek Chand who started the garden secretly in his spare time in 1957. Today it is spread over an area of forty-acres (160,000 m²), it is completely built of industrial & home waste and thrown-away items. Website |
South America
United States of America
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 30. | USA | LongHouse Reserve, East Hampton, New York | The Long Island gardens housing Jack Lenor Larsen's sculpture collection. Website |
| 31. | USA | Gantry Plaza State Park, New York | A garden at Hunters Point in Queens, beside historic ship-loading gantries on the East River. Designed by Tom Balsley. Website |
| 32. | USA | Liz Christy Garden, Manhattan, New York | The first community garden in New York City, founded in 1973 by local resident Liz Christy on a vacant lot on the corner of Bowery and Houston Street. Website |
| 33. | USA | James Van Sweden's garden at Ferry Cove, Chesapeake Bay, Maryland | A modern garden of grasses, melting into the surrounding landscape. |
| 34. | USA | Monticello, Charlottesville, Virginia | The garden of the author of the US Declaration of Independence and third President of the United States, Thomas Jefferson. Website |
| 35. | USA | The Huntington Botanic Garden, San Marino, California | A 120-acre (0.49 km2) botanic garden around the Huntington Library, laid out in the early 20th century. Website |
| 36. | USA | Lotusland, Montecito, Santa Barbara, California | The gardens of opera singer Madame Ganna Walska. Website |
| 37. | USA | Roland Emmerich's Garden, Hollywood, California | An instant mature garden for the Hollywood director and producer, with tall palm trees installed to provide privacy. |
| 38. | USA | The Greenberg Garden, Brentwood, Los Angeles | Designed by Mia Lehrer. |
China and Japan
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 39. | China | The Humble Administrator's Garden, Suzhou | 16th-century garden, with many pavilions, island, pools and bridges. |
| 40. | China | The Lion Grove, Suzhou | |
| 41. | China | The Imperial Summer Palace, Beijing | Complex of palaces and gardens northwest of Beijing, covering 3.5 km², looted and destroyed by the British and French in 1860. |
| 42. | Japan | Ryoan-ji Temple, Kyoto | Famous karesansui (dry landscape) rock garden. Part of the World Heritage Site. Website |
| 43. | Japan | Issidan, Ryogen-in Temple, Kyoto | Large Japanese rock garden. |
| 44. | Japan | Totekiko, Ryogen-in Temple, Kyoto | Small Japanese rock garden. |
| 45. | Japan | Urasenke Tea Garden, Kyoto | Tea room built by Sen Sōtan. Website |
| 46. | Japan | Tofuku-ji Temple Garden, Kyoto | Designed by Mirei Shigemori in the 1930s, including a moss garden and Japanese maples. Website |
Mediterranean
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 47. | Italy | Villa d'Este, Tivoli | A spectacular Renaissance garden with many fountains. Website |
| 48. | Italy | Villa Adriana, Tivoli | The remains of the garden set out for Roman Emperor Hadrian around his palace. |
| 49. | Italy | Elio's vineyard, Tivoli | A private fruit and vegetable garden. |
| 50. | Italy | Villa Lante, Bagnaia | A 16th-century Mannerist gardens of surprises. |
| 51. | Morocco | The Aguedal, Marrakech | Royal vegetable gardens dating to the 12th century, irrigated with water from the Ourika valley, with water stored in large central cisterns. Garden Visit review |
| 52. | Morocco | The Majorelle, Marrakech | The botanical garden created by French artist Jacques Majorelle in 1924, and restored by Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé in the 1980s. Website |
| 53. | Spain | The Alhambra and Generalife, Granada | The gardens of the Moorish palace in Andalusia. Website |
| 54. | Spain | The Patios of Córdoba | Private courtyard gardens, opened to the public in May each year, in the annual Festival de los Patios Cordobeses. Website |
| 55. | Spain | Casa Caruncho, Madrid | The private garden of Spanish landscape gardener, Fernando Caruncho. Website |
South Africa
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 56. | South Africa | Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, Cape Town | A botanic garden on the eastern slopes of Table Mountain. Website |
| 57. | South Africa | Henk Scholtz's garden, Franschhoek near Cape Town | |
| 58. | South Africa | The Company Garden, Cape Town | Originally created to provide fresh food to passing ships, using water from natural springs; now a city park. |
| 59. | South Africa | Stellenberg, Kenilworth, Cape Town | |
| 60. | South Africa | Donovan's L'il Eden, Hout Bay, Cape Town | A garden in a Cape squatter camp. |
| 61. | South Africa | Kirklington, Ficksburg, Free State | A garden established on the first half of the 20th century by English expatriate Edward Tudor Boddam-Whetham and his wife Ruby Newberry, daughter of Charles Newberry. It makes careful management of scarce water resources, and is named after Edward's ancestral home, Kirklington Hall in Nottinghamshire. Photos |
| 62. | South Africa | The Savanna Rock Garden, Magaliesberg, Johannesburg | A rock garden created by a married couple (one a sculptor, the other an artist). |
| 63. | South Africa | Brenthurst Gardens, Parktown, Johannesburg | The garden of Strilli Oppenheimer. Website |
| 64. | South Africa | Thuthuka School Garden, Tembisa Township near Johannesburg | A garden in a township school. |
Northern Europe
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 65. | UK | Rousham Park, Oxfordshire | Perhaps the first English landscape garden, created by William Kent in the early 18th century. Website |
| 66. | UK | Sissinghurst Castle, Kent | Influential English garden created in the 1930s by Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicolson; owned by the National Trust since 1967. Website |
| 67. | France | Chateau Villandry, The Loire Valley | Acres of parterre and box hedge, recreated in the 20th century. Website |
| 68. | France | Claude Monet's Garden, Giverny | Obsessively painted by Monet; now receiving over half a million visitors each year. Website |
| 69. | Belgium | Jacques Wirtz's Garden, Schoten, Antwerp | The private garden of Belgian landscape artist Jacques Wirtz, including his trademark "cloud" box hedges. Website |
| 70. | Netherlands | Het Loo Palace, Apeldoorn | The Baroque Dutch garden of William and Mary, originally designed by Claude Desgotz in the 1680s but replaced by an English landscape garden in the 18th century; restored from 1970 to 1984 to its appearance in 1700. Website |
| 71. | Netherlands | The Boon Family Garden, Oostzaan, Amsterdam | An example of a small modern domestic garden, designed by Piet Oudolf for Dutch architect Piet Boon. |
| 72. | Norway | The Arctic Alpine Botanic Gardens, Tromsø | The northernmost botanic garden in the world, 200 miles (320 km) inside the Arctic Circle. Website |
South-East Asia
| # | Country | Garden | Notes |
| 73. | Thailand | Jim Thompson's Garden, Bangkok | A jungle garden created by American Office of Strategic Services agent and silk merchant, Jim Thompson. Website |
| 74. | Thailand | The Grand Palace, Bangkok | Official residence of the King of Thailand. Website (Monty Don also visited the agricultural research fields at the Chitlada Palace.) |
| 75. | Thailand | The Klong Gardens, Bangkok | The private gardens that line the canals of Bangkok. |
| 76. | Singapore | The City in a Garden | The landscaping fulfilling the vision of former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, to soften the harshness of urban life by clothing Singapore in green. Singapore National Parks website |
| 77. | Singapore | Wilson Wong's Community Garden | An urban vegetable garden created as a community project. |
| 78. | Indonesia | Pura Taman Ayun, Mengwi, Bali | A 17th-century Hindu temple ("Taman Ayun" is Balinese for "beautiful garden"). |
| 79. | Indonesia | Traditional Home Compound, Ubud, Bali | A typical Balinese private household. |
| 80. | Indonesia | Villa Bebek, Sanur, Bali | A modern Balinese garden, designed by Australian Made Wijaya (Michael White). Website |
References
External links