Mount Stewart House & Gardens
Garden
Superbly designed and planted formal garden,in beguiling woodland and lakeside grounds.
Address:
Portaferry Road
Newtownards
Co Down
BT22 2AD
Newtownards
Co Down
BT22 2AD
Tel: +44 28 4278 8387
Please mention ireland-guide.com when enquiring.
Mount Stewart House & Gardens
Opening Months: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, DecemberOpening Days: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Opening Hours: 10am- close (4-8pm depending on time of year)
Admission Charge: Gardens only - adult c. £5, child c £2.50, Family c. £12, Groups c. £4
- Appointment Only
- Admission Charge
Georgina Campbell
Inspired by Edith, Marchioness of Londonderry, Mount Stewart is surely a contender for the most splendid garden in Ireland. The influential Londonderrys were part of the golden circle of their day and, when Edith came to Mount Stewart in 1919, she set about transforming what she saw as a dark and sad ancestral home into a sumptuous setting for entertaining guests like Winston Churchill and Harold Macmillan.
Within the 80 acre 19th century garden with its lake and specimen trees, a series of intricately designed and brilliantly planted formal gardens were laid out around the house at a time when garden design had reached an exquisite peak.
Offering beautiful contrasts of mood, the gardens move from the geometric parterres of sizzling reds, yellows and oranges on one side of the Italian garden and silvers and mauves on the other, to the cool greens and curvaceous design of the Spanish garden with its circular pool overlooked by a pantiled loggia and screened by arches of clipped leylandii.
There are touches of pure whimsy in the Dodo Terrace, where stone carvings represent the animal characters given by Edith to members of her Ark Club such as: Winston the Warlock and Harold the Humming Bird. The silver and white planting in the circular Mairi Garden,named for Edith’s youngest daughter echoes the rhyme “Silver bells and cockle shells”, in this case with campanulas, agapanthus, stachys and Perovskia ‘Blue Spire’. Gertrude Jekyll contributed the design for the earliest garden in the series, known as the Sunken Garden, and planted it with a wonderful combination of blue, purple, yellow and orange.
A ‘Red Hand of Ulster’ in the Shamrock Garden side by side with an Irish harp is surrounded by yew hedges clipped into the shape of all manner of creatures from deer to devils. Beyond this area the garden merges into informality, towards the Lily Wood where tender trees and shrubs prosper in the micro climate of the Ards Peninsula. There are unforgettable displays to be see, not only of lilies but of colonies of Himalayan poppies. The paths winding around the lake offer a dreamlike view of the hill topped by Tir Na n’Og, the Londonderry’s private burial ground, which is planted with exotic shrubs some of them fruit of plant hunting expeditions subscribed to by Lady Edith.
Elsewhere in the 78 acres of grounds are the Coronation Walk, rhododendron glades with of the aristocracy of the rhododendron family R. sinograndeand falconeriand many others, and the Jubilee Walk planted in 1935 for George V’s Jubilee. Not to be missed is the Temple of the Winds, designed by James ‘Athenian’ Stewart in 1780; based on the Tower of Andronicus Cyrrestes in Athens, it looks out over Strangford Lough.
The garden merits a full day visit and the Londonderry ancestral home is also open to the public. The estate is now in the hands of the National Trust and the gardens are currently maintained by head gardener Phil Rollinson and his team.
Within the 80 acre 19th century garden with its lake and specimen trees, a series of intricately designed and brilliantly planted formal gardens were laid out around the house at a time when garden design had reached an exquisite peak.
Offering beautiful contrasts of mood, the gardens move from the geometric parterres of sizzling reds, yellows and oranges on one side of the Italian garden and silvers and mauves on the other, to the cool greens and curvaceous design of the Spanish garden with its circular pool overlooked by a pantiled loggia and screened by arches of clipped leylandii.
There are touches of pure whimsy in the Dodo Terrace, where stone carvings represent the animal characters given by Edith to members of her Ark Club such as: Winston the Warlock and Harold the Humming Bird. The silver and white planting in the circular Mairi Garden,named for Edith’s youngest daughter echoes the rhyme “Silver bells and cockle shells”, in this case with campanulas, agapanthus, stachys and Perovskia ‘Blue Spire’. Gertrude Jekyll contributed the design for the earliest garden in the series, known as the Sunken Garden, and planted it with a wonderful combination of blue, purple, yellow and orange.
A ‘Red Hand of Ulster’ in the Shamrock Garden side by side with an Irish harp is surrounded by yew hedges clipped into the shape of all manner of creatures from deer to devils. Beyond this area the garden merges into informality, towards the Lily Wood where tender trees and shrubs prosper in the micro climate of the Ards Peninsula. There are unforgettable displays to be see, not only of lilies but of colonies of Himalayan poppies. The paths winding around the lake offer a dreamlike view of the hill topped by Tir Na n’Og, the Londonderry’s private burial ground, which is planted with exotic shrubs some of them fruit of plant hunting expeditions subscribed to by Lady Edith.
Elsewhere in the 78 acres of grounds are the Coronation Walk, rhododendron glades with of the aristocracy of the rhododendron family R. sinograndeand falconeriand many others, and the Jubilee Walk planted in 1935 for George V’s Jubilee. Not to be missed is the Temple of the Winds, designed by James ‘Athenian’ Stewart in 1780; based on the Tower of Andronicus Cyrrestes in Athens, it looks out over Strangford Lough.
The garden merits a full day visit and the Londonderry ancestral home is also open to the public. The estate is now in the hands of the National Trust and the gardens are currently maintained by head gardener Phil Rollinson and his team.
Best time of year to visit:
Gardens Strengths
Flowers all yearGroups & Tours
- Groups Accepted
- Groups Need Appointments
- Accept Only Groups
- Guided Tours
Tour Days:
Tour Times
Guided tours of house only (not garden)Additional
Miscellaneous
Open-air theatre. Wedding Fair and Harvest Food Fayre. Candle shopDirections
On East side of Strangford Lough on Belfast-Portaferry Road.Facilities / Features
- Parking
- Suitable for children
- Dogs welcome
- Refreshments
- Restaurant
- Cafe
- Visitor Centre
- House open to public (where applicable)
- Museum
- Gift Shop
- Garden Centre
- Plant Sales
- Accomodation
- WC
- WC Wheelchair Accessible
- Wheelchair Access
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Trip Planning Tools
My Ireland Guide
Local Recommendations
Hospitality
- Mount Stewart Tea Room
(0.0km) - Angus Farm Shop
(4.6km)SE - Homegrown
(6.0km)NW - Knotts Bakery And Coffee Shop
(6.2km)NW - Poacher's Pocket, The
(8.2km)SW - Daft Eddys & Island Coffee Room
(8.2km)SW - Sugarcane Café Bistro
(8.2km)SW - No. 14 at the Georgian House
(8.2km)SW - Rogue and Co
(8.2km)SW - Old Post Office Tea Rooms & Pantry, The
(8.6km)SW - Primacy Meats Food Village
(9.2km)NW - Mash Direct
(9.6km)NW - McKees Country Store
(10.5km)NW - Grace Neill's
(10.5km)NE - Clandeboye Lodge Hotel
(10.7km)NW - Balloo House & Overwood
(10.7km)SW - Pier 36
(10.8km)NE - Clandeboye Estate Yoghurt
(11.1km)NW - Teddys
(11.5km)NW - Heatherlea, The
(11.7km)NW
Self Catering
- The Colonel's Lodge
(12.7km)NW - Golfkeel Cottages - Oatfield Cottage , The Loft Cottage, Dovedale Cottage
(48.7km)SW - Ballealy Cottage
(49.9km)NW - Rostrevor Holidays
(58.9km)SW
Farmers Markets
- Belfast - St. Georges Street - Saturdays
(20.0km)NW - Park Shopping Centre - Belfast - Thursdays
(22.5km)NW - Lisburn - County Antrim - Saturdays
(27.7km)SW - Castlewellan - Co Down - Saturdays
(39.7km)SW
Tourist Attractions
-
Somme Heritage Centre
(7.4km)NW -
Ulster Folk & Transport Museum
(15.6km)NW -
Titanic Belfast
(19.5km)NW -
Exploris Aquarium & Seal Sanctuary
(20.4km)NW -
Queens University
(20.6km)NW -
Ulster Museum
(20.7km)NW -
Carrickfergus Museum
(21.2km)NW -
Castle Ward House & Demesne
(21.4km)NW -
Belfast Zoo
(23.9km)NW -
Museum at the Mill
(26.1km)NW -
Sentry Hill & Visitor Centre
(27.9km)NW -
Larne Museum & Arts Centre
(35.1km)NW -
Mid Antrim Museum at The Braid
(54.2km)NW
Golf Courses
- Royal Belfast Golf Club
(15.7km) NW - Royal County Down Golf Club
(42.2km) SW - Galgorm Castle Golf Club
(56.0km) NW
Gardens
- Mount Stewart House & Gardens
(0.0km) - Anna's House & Garden
(9.4km)SW - Glenmount
(12.1km)NW - Guincho
(14.6km)NW - Redcot
(16.1km)NW - Rowallane Garden
(17.7km)SW - Seaforde Gardens
(31.2km)SW - 2 Old Galgorm Road
(55.5km)NW
Nearby Towns/Areas
- Greyabbey
(4.6km) SE - Comber
(8.1km) SW - Kircubbin
(9.6km) SE - Newtownards
(9.6km) SE - Donaghadee
(10.6km) NE - Killinchy
(10.7km) SW - Bangor
(12.1km) NW - Groomsport
(12.6km) NE - Crawfordsburn
(13.1km) NW - Craigavad
(15.6km) NW
Apps and Books
-
Georgina Campbell's Ireland - The Best of the Best
A selective companion guide to our famous broad-based online collection, the ‘glovebox bib ...more... -
From Tide to Table by Georgina Campbell
Paperback edition of From Tide to Table - Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Buying, Prep ...more...
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