Step inside and you’ll find yourself immersed in a world of cacti, tropical plants and koi carp
In the heart of Wythenshawe Park are a collection of greenhouses which appear rather unassuming from the outside. Yet pass through the doorway and you’ll find yourself transported to different worlds, from desert landscapes to the middle of the jungle.
This is Wythenshawe Horticultural Centre. Located only a few minutes’ walk away from the park’s car park, the centre is made up of a series of connected greenhouses which are home to a diverse range of plants, an aviary and fish ponds.
Outside there are a series of gardens, a small orchard and fruit and vegetable patches. The centre is completely free to visit and is managed by Manchester Council and Blossom, a volunteer group which provides food-growing workshops and opportunities.
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Greenhouses aren’t that unusual in Greater Manchester parks and gardens, but it’s the size of Wythenshawe Horticultural Centre which really sets it apart. There are numerous rooms to explore, each one focusing on different plants with carefully designed paths taking visitors through the displays.
In one room it feels like you’re walking through the desert – complete with the heat to match with spikey cactuses reaching up to the ceiling and tiny succulents emerging from the gravel. Various pots hang from the ceiling, long green tendrils dangling from them.
In another room, visitors are transported to the heart of the jungle, surrounded by lush palms and tropical blooms, including bright orange bush lilies and glowing white canna lilies. There are small bridges which lead you over ornamental water features, allowing you to be immersed in a different world.
But the plants are not alone. In one of the greenhouses a large pond is home to numerous gold fish and majestic koi carp, swimming along with their mouths gaping at the water. A small aviary adds to the tropical feel.
There’s even a section which transports you back to a different age when dinosaurs roamed our plant. In the ancient plant areas you’ll find ‘living fossils’, such as Encephalartos natalensis, a giant cycad which dates back over 250 million years.
The centre feels like Kew Gardens in miniature. Granted, it doesn’t match the scale of the London attraction yet it offers you the same opportunity to reconnect with nature and marvel at the wonderful – and sometimes weird – plants we have on earth. All for free.
There is a tenuous connection between the centre and Kew Gardens. The centre is home to the Darrah Cactus Collection. Born in Manchester in 1844, Charles Darrah was a lead manufacturer with a passion for plants and built a five-room glasshouse at his home in Heaton Mersey.
This became home to “one of the finest cactus and succulent collections in Britain, second only to Kew Gardens.” After his death in 1903, the collection was offered to Manchester City Council, and although reluctant at first, they were persuaded by a professor to keep it and a glasshouse was built in Alexandra Park, which opened in 1906.
It was a popular spot and accepted plant exchanges from across Europe, but it was damaged in a suffragette bombing in 1913. Luckily most of the plants were saved and a police guard was even deployed to guard it.
As Manchester’s air quality declined and the glass house was no longer fit for purpose, the collection was moved to Wythenshawe Park where it remains to this day. The centre itself originally began life to provide plants for use by the council throughout the city, but when production stopped the greenhouses were converted into display houses, providing an educational and recreational opportunity for the people of Manchester.
Today the Horticultural Centre forms a small part of what Wythenshawe Park has to offer and it’s certainly one worth checking out.


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