London's Queen Elizabeth II Garden Welcomes Wildlife Ahead of Opening
The Queen Elizabeth II garden in Regent's Park, London, is on track to become a thriving biodiversity hotspot even before it opens to the public on April 27, 2026. The £5m project, led by Royal Parks, has converted a former brownfield site into an 8,000 sq metre (two-acre) paradise for flora and fauna, boasting a 184% increase in biodiverse wildlife habitat.
As visitors enter the garden, they will be greeted by an array of wildlife, including a prickle of hedgehogs, an armada of newts, a flock of grey wagtails, and a “very cheeky” fox that has been visiting the site on a daily basis. The garden's design features a mix of formally designed landscapes and wildflower meadows, creating a micro-mosaic of habitats that support a wide range of plant and animal life.
The garden's features include a large ornamental pond with naturally filtered water, providing a new aquatic habitat for plants, insects, and amphibians. A former water storage tower has been repurposed with swift nesting and bat roosting boxes integrated into its new roof. The site also boasts over 40 new trees, 2,000 sq metres of wildflower meadow, and 5,000 sq metres of climate-resilient plants.
The project aims to not only increase biodiversity but also create a beautiful and evocative public garden to commemorate the late Queen Elizabeth II. The garden's design invites visitors to observe and engage with various wildlife habitats as they move from an ornate, formally designed landscape towards a meadow planted with wildflowers.
Matthew Halsall, the manager and landscape architect behind the project, emphasized the importance of creating a micro-mosaic of habitats within the relatively small, two-acre garden. The garden's interconnected channels, or swales, ensure rainwater flows slowly through the site, reducing the need for irrigation and creating very wet habitats in winter, which then become partially dry in summer.
The Royal Parks has an eight-strong biodiversity team, consisting of ecologists, research officers, and project managers, who work with over 3,000 volunteers to support the parks' biodiversity projects and conservation work. The team has been working to monitor and increase biodiversity across the capital's 5,000 acres of Royal Parks, with the goal of building more resilient habitats for wildlife.