Voting for this award closes on 31 October 2025 at 23:55 and winners will be announced at the Awards ceremony on 6 February 2026.
Please see the full list of eligible people’s choice candidates below and, once you have looked at all the entries, use the form at the bottom of this page to submit your vote.
Click on the images to enlarge and scroll through.
Stefano Marinaz MSGLD - The Garden with a Vibe
Designed to blend with its surroundings, echoing the area’s leafy character and natural beauty with lush planting borders and climbing plants softening the edges and giving the illusion of a larger, more immersive garden
Rob Beswick - Fidelity Heart Zone
Creation of a more fluid and contemporary campus with a thriving heart which facilitates connection and interaction and improved site circulation and access with simplified levels across the site
Miria Harris MSGLD - Modern Crafted Garden
Opened up to the wider countryside with zones within the garden to encourage different ways of engaging with the space with a natural flow between and providing a place to relax and entertain
James Smith MSGLD - Foxglove House
Vital components include habitat walls, a green roof, sensitive wilding of the site with wildflower meadows, new tree planting, creation of a wildlife pond, a local stone filled ha ha and drainage run off swale.
Matthew Wilson MSGLD - Graylings
Created low to no irrigation plantings with a limited palette of new and reclaimed materials that is in harmony with the ethos of the ultra-environmental new build Passivhaus house in terms of sustainability and aesthetics.
Fi Boyle MSGLD - Old Quarry Garden
Created space for relaxation and entertaining with additional terraces, calming water and sloped paths and steps for navigation across the levels. Trees and planting screen the public footpath while maintaining the scenic views
Adolfo Harrison MSGLD - Fitzroy Park
Introduced sloping paths acting as contours that bring circular movement into the space and shaped the fluid planting consistent either side of the paths giving a feeling you’re walking through a woodland landscape.
Anca Panait - The Courtyard
Responding to the modern house a simple and classical layout with a central path splits the courtyard into two generous planting beds that soften the building with a central water feature adding sound and movement
Mandy Buckland MSGLD - The Meadows
Created a low budget family garden with easy transition inside to out for toddler, with lighting, irrigation, privacy screening, and easy maintenance with defined areas for entertaining, play, BBQ, storage, and bins.
Sheila Jack MSGLD - Notting Hill Garden
Elevated the garden to echo the contemporary, highly polished design of the interiors with effusive, seductive but low maintenance planting incorporating existing Pittosporum and creating a ‘sense of arrival’
Cassandra Crouch MSGLD - Terracotta House
A modern garden with a natural feel with view of plants from the house, a small relaxed seating area for evening sun, and integrated children’s play - stepping stones, swings, paths for scooters.
Adolfo Harrison MSGLD - Westbourne Park
Ingenious furniture with its own lightweight polycarbonate roofs shields from the protected lime tree honey dew thus extending the garden use, and the planting tumbling over the retaining walls towards the ground floor windows adds impact
Laura Burt - EYFS Garden St Francis School
A safe and inclusive nature led outdoor space for free imaginative and physical play, and education and social development in groups. Planting chosen for safety, seasonal interest, food, sensory impact, biodiversity value and low maintenance.
Nicholas Atherton MSGLD - Merstham Park School
Designed to enhance the students’ sensory connection with the natural environment around the school’s outdoor spaces to improve psychological health and wellbeing, increase levels of relaxation, concentration and cognitive performance, social activation and motivation to learn.
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