How the Pro Corda Garden: A Suffolk Retreat began
The story of The Pro Corda Garden: A Suffolk Retreat began last year with, as is often the case, a reflection of the designer’s – in this case, my own - narrative. I returned to live in Suffolk in 2014 and, quite early on, the seed was sown for a garden that would somehow celebrate the arts, crafts and magical landscapes – both natural and man-made - of my home county.
Having been working on a rather desolate, Benjamin Britten-esque coastal garden, I met Andrew Quartermain, the CEO of the Pro Corda Trust, a musical charity based amidst the romantic ruins of Leiston Abbey. We initially met to discuss the landscaping of the abbey grounds, a truly exciting project that will hopefully optimise the grounds for generations to come.
Our conversation, fuelled by Andrew’s infectious enthusiasm, soon led us to the notion of presenting a garden at Chelsea. It would blend Suffolk, and music, my own story, and that of Pro Corda.
Brooding beach huts coated in black tar and wind-warped hawthorns were thrown out of the proverbial window, to be replaced by a soft, secluded and welcoming summer house, surrounded by a floriferous planting palette based upon cottage garden favourites.