'' at Huntington Library in August 2014|alt=Gigantic green and red flower with a crowd of people looking at it. The Huntington's
botanical gardens cover and showcase plants from around the world. Huntington worked to make them thrive in the generous California climate. Today his many projects of horticulture live on, providing opportunities for botanical research and for enjoyment. The gardens are divided into more than a dozen themes, including the Australian Garden, Camellia Collection, Children's Garden,
Desert Garden, Herb Garden,
Japanese Garden, Lily Ponds, North Vista, Palm Garden,
Rose Garden, the
Shakespeare Garden, Subtropical and Jungle Garden, and the
Chinese Garden (Liu Fang Yuan 流芳園 or the Garden of Flowing Fragrance). The Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science has a large tropical plant collection, as well as a
carnivorous plants wing. The Huntington has a program to protect and propagate endangered plant species. In 1999, 2002, 2009, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2025 specimens of
Amorphophallus titanum, or the odiferous "corpse flower", bloomed at the facility. Fifteen corpse flowers have bloomed at Huntington since 1999. Three flowers opened in July 2021. The Camellia Collection, recognized as an International Camellia Garden of Excellence, includes nearly eighty different
camellia species and some 1,200 cultivated varieties, many of them rare and historic. The Rose Garden contains approximately 1,200
cultivars (4,000 individual plants) arranged historically to trace the development of roses from ancient to modern times.
Chinese Garden A
Chinese garden, the largest outside of China, was dedicated on February 26, 2008, after artisans from
Suzhou, China spent some six months at Huntington to construct the first phase of the newest facility. On at the northwest corner of the Huntington, the garden features man-made lakes ("Pond of Reflected Greenery" and "Lake of Reflected Fragrance") with pavilions connected by bridges. Unique Chinese names are assigned to many of the facilities in the garden, such as the
tea house, known as the "Hall of the Jade Camellia". Other pavilions are the "Love for the Lotus Pavilion", "Terrace of the Jade Mirror", and "Pavilion of the Three Friends". The initial phase cost $18.3 million to build. The second phase, which includes the "Clear and Transcendent Pavilion", "Lingering Clouds Peak" with a waterfall, Waveless Boat, "Crossing through Fragrance" bridge and the "Cloud Steps" bridge, opened on March 8, 2014. There were other pavilions, including the "Flowery Brush Studio", and structures completed under phase two. A place to display its large collections of
penjing and
bonsai has completed.
Desert Garden The
Desert Garden, one of the world's largest and oldest outdoor collections of
cacti and other
succulents, contains plants from extreme environments, many of which were acquired by Henry E. Huntington and William Hertrich (the garden curator). One of the Huntington's most botanically important gardens, the Desert Garden brings together a plant group largely unknown and unappreciated in the beginning of the 1900s. Containing a broad category of
xerophytes (
aridity-adapted plants), the
Desert Garden grew to preeminence and remains today among the world's finest, with more than 5,000 species.
Japanese Garden In 1911, art dealer
George Turner Marsh (who also created the
Japanese Tea Garden at the
Golden Gate Park) sold his commercial Japanese tea garden to Henry E. Huntington to create the foundations of what is known today as the Japanese Garden. The garden was completed in 1912 and opened to the public in 1928. According to historian Kendall Brown, the garden consists of three gardens: the original stroll garden with
koi-filled ponds and a
drum or moon bridge, the raked-gravel dry garden added in 1968, and the traditionally landscaped tea garden. In addition, the gardens feature a large bell, the authentic ceremonial teahouse Seifu-an (the Arbor of Pure Breeze), a fully furnished Japanese house, the Zen Garden, and the bonsai collections with hundreds of trees. The Bonsai Courts at the Huntington is the home of the Golden State
Bonsai Federation Southern Collection. Another ancient Japanese art form can be found at the Harry Hirao
Suiseki Court, where visitors can touch the suiseki or viewing stones.
Other gardens •
Australian Garden •
Camellia Garden • Children's Garden • Conservatory •
Herb Garden •
Jungle Garden •
Lily Ponds •
Palm Garden •
Ranch Garden •
Rose Garden •
Shakespeare Garden •
Subtropical Garden ==In popular culture==