Holkham Hall's restored walled garden sees 57,000 visitors

  • Published
Holkham Hall Walled GardenImage source, Holkham Hall Estate/Instagram
Image caption,

The public can now see 200 years of garden history in the Holkham Hall walled garden

An historic walled garden which reopened after a Covid-delayed restoration project had some 57,000 visitors in 2022, its owners said.

Holkham Hall in Norfolk had been slowly working to restore the six-acre garden after it fell into disrepair, and then the Covid pandemic halted work.

Much of it reopened last year after being awarded some £726,000 in grants since 2020 to help recovery.

A spokesman said it was in "a much better place" than two years ago.

Holkham Hall, between Hunstanton and Wells-next-the-Sea, is a privately-owned Palladian-style mansion, built by Thomas Coke, the first Earl of Leicester, between 1734 and 1764.

It has been inhabited by the Coke family ever since, who run the estate as a farm and tourist attraction.

Its surrounding park and garden is Grade I listed, external with the walled garden thought to have been originally laid out by Samuel Wyatt during the late 1700s.

The estate, which includes the vast, sandy expanse of Holkham beach, has long-standing connections to the Royal family, whose Sandringham Estate is nearby.

For about 200 years, vegetables for the house and estate plus rare plants were successfully gown there, but by the early 2000s there had been a demise.

Image source, Holkham Hall Estate/Instagram
Image caption,

Holkham Hall, on the north Norfolk coast, has been inhabited by the Coke family since the 18th Century

Head gardener Mark Morrell said various attempts had been made from about 2007 to take it back in hand and open it back up as a tourist attraction but "without much money to do it, it was done quickly and cheaply".

It opened in 2008 but there were "lots of mistakes and bland planting" and the estate had been "revisiting what was done in haste and improving it", he said.

The estate was hit like other places when it closed in March 2020 and there was a "big loss", Mr Morrell added, but by the end of the year, visitor numbers went "through the roof" as people wanted to get out and about.

Image source, Holkham Hall Estate/Instagram
Image caption,

The garden is thought to have been originally laid out by Samuel Wyatt during the late 1700s

The estate then received grants from the Cultural Recovery Fund, external, Historic Houses Foundation and Historic England, which allowed it "to finish work quicker than we might have done".

Restoration of the Thomas Messenger Glasshouse, external had started prior to Covid, but a grant enabled it to get finished and it opened in 2021.

Image source, Holkham Estate
Image caption,

Restoration of the Thomas Messenger Glasshouse had started prior to Covid

Other grants enabled the Samuel Wyatt Vinery, external - a Grade II listed Victorian glasshouse - and sunken pit houses, external to open in 2022.

"The projects were on our wish list for the next 10 years but Covid brought it all forward and two years on we are in a much better place," Mr Morrell said.

Image source, Holkham Estate
Image caption,

The sunken pit houses are sunk into the ground to regulate the surrounding temperature

The estate has spent a total of about £1m on the restoration project and the work continues.

Image source, Holkham Estate
Image caption,

The Samuel Wyatt Vinery - a Grade II-listed Victorian glasshouse - reopened in 2022. It is hoped there will soon be specialist houses for collections of plants instead of growing everything in one place

Mr Morrell added it meant the public could now see a unique walled garden.

"A lot of houses have Victorian and Edwardian greenhouses but it's fairly unusual to have a Georgian greenhouse," he said.

"We have a real collection of super historic buildings which also go through to Victorian and Edwardian times, so in a small area there is nearly 200 years of greenhouse history and it was all the best available at the time.

"Nothing is ever finished in gardening and we constantly want to change and improve, but it's open to the public."

Image source, Holkham Hall Estate/Instagram
Image caption,

The restored garden is divided into squares and slips, each with their own theme and planting plan

Find BBC News: East of England on Facebook, external, Instagram, external and Twitter, external. If you have a story suggestion email eastofenglandnews@bbc.co.uk, external

Related topics

Around the BBC

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.