The Wellesley CollegeBotanic Gardens are botanical gardens located on the campus of Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. The greenhouses and 22 acres of outdoor gardens include thousands of plants representing over 1,500 different taxa from more than 150 different plant families. NOTE: The Global Flora conservatory will be closed to the public until Science Center construction is complete at the end of 2021. At the current time, there are no greenhouses to visit at the Wellesley College Botanic Gardens. The outdoor gardens are open daily, dawn to dusk. The collections include:
Alexandra Botanic Garden - named in memory of the six-year-old daughter of Cordenio and Mary Severance. The garden is home to Paramecium Pond, the most prominent landmark in the Botanic Gardens. A small brook known as the Silver Thread winds through the garden from a waterfall at the east end of the campus and empties into Paramecium Pond. Notable trees include a Kentucky coffee tree', Japanese weeping cherry, tulip tree', dawn redwood' and some 300 year old white oaks' that pre-date the founding of the college.
Edible Ecosystem Teaching Garden - located on the slope below the Whitin Observatory. This designed plant community mimics the properties of a natural ecosystem but produces food and other products useful to humans with a minimum of maintenance. The first plantings were established in spring 2011, and community planting workdays are held twice a year, in spring and early fall. The overall design concept is a "bowl of fruit," with taller tree species fringing the swamp and dwarf trees planted closer to the observatory. This design allows for unrestricted sight lines from the telescopes even as the garden matures. Among the specific habitats are a nut grove, fruit woodland, and a fruit thicket.
H. H. Hunnewell Arboretum - named for Horatio Hollis Hunnewell, a philanthropist, prominent horticulturist, and neighbor of Wellesley College. The arboretum incorporates numerous members of the Ericaceae family: rhododendrons and azaleas ', andromeda ', mountain laurel' and dog-hobble .'' Among the notable trees are Fraser fir', Japanese maple', eastern white pine', pitch pine' and sawara falsecypress '. The upland woods at the east end of the arboretum is a fragment of the type of mixed oak forest one is likely to find in eastern Massechusetts.
Global Flora Conservatory at the Margaret C. Ferguson Greenhouses - named for this pre-eminent botanist and member of the Wellesley College faculty in the first half of the 20th century. The original Ferguson Greenhouses were demolished in 2018 to make way for the Global Flora Conservatory. With its highlight on plant form, Global Flora carries Margaret Ferguson's vision of "laboratories under glass" into the 21st century. It is a showcase of living beauty highlighting plant form, as well as a new node for interdisciplinary science research and teaching, and an innovative example of sustainable design. The Global Flora project won a LafargeHolcim bronze medal, a prestigious international award in sustainable design, in 2017.