Landscape students win awards at RHS show

Sheffield landscape architecture students have won prestigious awards for their work at the Royal Horticultural Society Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival held earlier this month.

Some plants planted among rocks

'Winds of Change,’ a Resilient Pocket planting design by year-out students Saachi Parasrampuria, Marko Yau and James Miller won an RHS Gold medal and Best Resilient Pocket. Inspired by Jaywick Sands on the north Essex coast, the garden used wind, salt and drought tolerant plants growing in locally sourced crushed waste aggregate, and beach debris as a sculptural element. 

The second project 'Beautifully Stressed,’ also a Resilient Pocket planting design, was created by Masters students, Xun Xie, Jingwen Liu, Andrew Mc Master and Awika Butnark received and received a RHS Silver medal. The garden was inspired by species able to thrive in arid brownfield sites.

Both gardens explore the challenges of planting in a changing climate and challenging soil conditions. 

Orange flowers growing on a plant in rocky soil

“These gardens take an enormous amount of dedication and hard work to produce, from initial application through to the final build”, says Dr Jo Phillips, University Teacher in Landscape Architecture. “Many congratulations to the teams involved.”

Later this month, another team of students will go to the RHS Flower Show at Tatton Park.

Grey to Green, Sheffield

Champions of Landscape Architecture

As the UK’s only independent department of Landscape Architecture, we are passionate about the power of our profession to address pressing global issues.

A global reputation

Sheffield is a research university with a global reputation for excellence. We're a member of the Russell Group: one of the 24 leading UK universities for research and teaching.