The UK has 35 WHSs that include a diverse range of cultural sites that reflect our 5000 years of history and our island story. The list includes historic designed landscapes, gardens, and parklands that were created for their beauty and artistry and are now considered of international importance.
Many of our historic designed landscapes are on Historic England’s national Register of Historic Parks and Gardens but only a few are included on UNESCO’s World Heritage List. These include:
- Studley Royal Park including the Ruins of Fountains Abbey WHS combines the dramatic ruins of a medieval abbey with an exquisite 18th-century water garden and deer park designed to enhance the natural setting. The lakes, garden buildings, and create a seamless blend of history and nature that UNESCO praises as “a masterpiece of human creative genius.”
- Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew WHS combines scientific research, botanical collections with Victorian gardens, glasshouses, and parklands. The landscape with over 50,000 living species tells a story of global plant exploration, influence and garden design evolving over centuries.
- Maritime Greenwich WHS includes the carefully designed Greenwich Park, one of London’s oldest enclosed Royal Parks with 17th-century planned vistas and gardens that add to the Site’s outstanding universal value.
- Derwent Valley Mills WHS is an industrial revolution heritage site, with mill complexes and is surrounded by an extensive relic industrial valley landscape with well-maintained parklands and ornamental gardens linked to nearby estates, illustrating the rise social and environmental values of this era.
- Ironbridge Gorge WHS as the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution, the Site features designed parks and gardens within its setting where landscaped grounds provided aesthetic pleasure and social benefits alongside industrial innovation.
- Blenheim Palace WHS celebrates in its setting the early 18th century grand John Vanbrugh’s landscape overlaid by Capability Brown’s masterpiece of the English Landscape style.
- English Lake District WHS is an extensive cultural landscape that includes many historic grand houses, gardens and parks together with harmonious designed landscapes that demonstrate the Romantic and Picturesque Movements of the 18th century.
