Orman Garden

The Orman Garden is one of the most famous Botanical gardens in Egypt. It is located at Giza, in Cairo. It dates back to 1875 and the reign of Khedive Isma'il Pasha who established the garden on a larger site than it presently occupies as part of the Palace of the Khedive. A great lover of gardens, the Khedive entrusted the design of the garden to the French landscaper Jean-Pierre Barillet-Deschamps. It became a public botanical garden in 1910/1917 and put under the Ministry of Agriculture management.[1]

Orman Garden
LocationGiza Governorate, Cairo, Egypt
Coordinates30°01′45″N 31°12′47″E
Area20 acre
Created1875
OpenYes

The garden covers about 28 acres. Today, the garden contains a rock garden, a rose garden, cactus gardens, and probably the most notable feature, the lotus pond.

Orman Garden is located west of the River Nile and east of Cairo University in the Giza Governorate. “Orman” is a Turkish word, which means “the forest”. [2] A small botanical museum attached to the garden shelters herbaria dating from the Ismail khedive and furniture from the king Farouk.

Spring Festival

Since 1920 the Orman Garden has hosted a spring floral exhibition. The Spring Festival starts on March 22 every year. During that time, many companies exhibit their various plant offerings including ornamental plants, cut flowers, cactus, seeds for growing many plants, fertilizers, and pots.

Special Collections

Cactus grafting.

Conifers, palms, cacti, succulents, roses, bamboo, ficus, aquatic plants, strelitzia


Orman Garden has a seed bank and publishes it own Index Seminum.

References

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