RHS Harlow Carr is to covert a bungalow on its site into staff offices and welfare accommodation.
Harrogate Borough Council has approved the conversion of the bungalow on Crag Lane, which falls within the Harlow Carr estate.
The building had previously been used for residential purposes. It will now be converted for commercial use.
Last month the RHS submitted details about how it plans to convert the former Harrogate Arms pub, also on Crag Lane, into a cafe.
The horticultural charity bought the building in 2014 and received planning permission in 2019 to create a ground floor cafe and kitchen facilities.
Last month the horticultural charity had plans for a new footbridge at the gardens approved.
The Thaliana Bridge crosses the Queen Mother’s Lake at the south end of the gardens to improve access and provide new routes for visitors.
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Conversion of former Harrogate Arms moves step closer
Building work to convert the former Harrogate Arms pub on Crag Lane into a cafe has moved a step closer.
The horticultural charity RHS bought the building in 2014 and received planning permission in 2019 to create a ground floor cafe and kitchen facilities to serve visitors of neighbouring RHS Harlow Carr.
It has now submitted a construction management plan to Harrogate Borough Council that gives details about how contractors will go about the conversion.
It says work will include the demolition of extensions, partitions, a boundary wall and low wall.
It will also involve the erection of three single-storey extensions and a boundary wall; reduction of floor levels; widening of entrance; removal of fire escape; installation of replacement doors, windows and fanlights; alterations to fenestration; formation and restoration of hard and soft landscaping.
Work on site will take place from 8am to 6pm Monday to Friday and from 8am to 1pm on Saturday. There will be no work on Sundays or Bank Holidays.
The council will now consider the plan.
Hotel, nightclub, restaurant and pub
The Harlow Car Hotel and Bath House was built in 1844 by two businessmen following the discovery of an ‘especially efficacious’ sulphur spring in the area.
The hotel was sold to Harrogate Corporation in 1915 and has gone through a number of incarnations since then, as a nightclub, restaurant and latterly a pub.

The building in 1930. Credit – Archant
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Sustainable menu
When the cafe opens in 2023, hospitality students from Harrogate College will devise the menu.
The students have been asked to use their culinary and creative skills to come up with a concept for a sustainable menu.
Fresh produce grown at the RHS gardens will feature prominently in the dishes.
Harrogate distillery wins RHS branded drinks licenceA Harrogate distillery has partnered with the Royal Horticultural Society to create branded spirits including whiskey, gin and rum.
The RHS has handed the licence to Harrogate Tipple to prepare the products for the Chelsea Flower Show in May.
The bottle and labels are still at the design stage but will use imagery that, like the spirits, captures and combines Harrogate Tipple’s artisan ideals with the inspirational aims of the gardening charity.
Steven Green, founder of Harrogate Tipple, said:
“We were thrilled to be asked to develop a series of spirits that reflected the excellence and love of British gardens that is the hallmark of the RHS.
“It has been a delight to work with the UK’s favourite gardening charity and a strong supporter of British craft company produced food and drink.”
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The range will then be available at retail from the beginning of June, selling at several physical and online outlets that include spirit retailers, garden centres and independent wine stores.
It will also be sold via the Harrogate Tipple and RHS websites and at RHS Gardens.
Cathy Snow, licensing manager at RHS, said:
New paths at RHS Harlow Carr made with recycled plastic“Our intention was partnering with a distillery that combined a true artisan approach with the creativity and excellence that would make RHS gin, whisky and rum stand out.
“Not an easy task, but in Harrogate Tipple we have found the ideal partner for a range of spirits that are both memorable and delicious.”
RHS Garden Harlow Carr has replaced a series of paths with a new resin material made with recycled plastic.
The RHS garden in Harrogate, which receives 450,000 visitors a year, has re-used the equivalent of one and a half million plastic straws.
It is part of an ongoing maintenance programme after rain and snow damaged the site, particularly the paths.
RHS contracted resin specialists Oltco, which has headquarters in Cornwall but a base in Harrogate.
The resin paths are made of plastic that is already in circulation, such as straws, bottles and food packaging, sourced from plastic recycling.
Read more:
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Paul Cook, curator at RHS Garden Harlow Carr, said:
“The new pathways have helped to transform the landscape and we’re excited for our visitors to experience this.”

The new look for the paths in the gardens.
Paul Cowham, director at Oltco Harrogate added:
Harlow Carr set to open new Friendship Bridge“I have been regularly visiting the gardens for many years with my family so I was particularly proud to be able to work alongside Paul Cook and partner with Harlow Carr to transform its pathways.”
A new bridge will be unveiled at RHS Garden Harlow Carr on Monday.
The bridge, which was built by Harrogate dry stone waller Neil Beasley in four months over lockdown, has been named the Friendship Bridge.
The name is in recognition of a £10,000 donation from the Friends of Harlow Carr, which paid for half of the £20,000 costs.
The Royal Horticultural Society, which is the gardening charity that owns RHS Garden Harlow Carr, paid for the other half.
The centerpiece of the design, which was drawn up by Leeds master craftsman David Griffiths, represents the head of a flower, with stone petals surrounding a central stonework arch,
The Geoffrey Smith memorial stone is positioned at one end of the bridge wall as a lasting testament to the former garden curator, who died in 2009.
Paul Cook, curator at RHS Garden Harlow Carr, said:
“We now have a beautiful new piece of artwork, which has been handcrafted in Yorkshire stone using traditional dry stone walling techniques.
“As well as being a thing of beauty in itself, the work will help to alleviate surface flooding problems.”
The new bridge was built with freshly quarried Yorkshire stone along with stone from the structure that it replaced.
Mr Beasley previously created Harlow Carr’s garden entrance feature and monoliths on the corner of Crag Lane and Otley Road, which were also designed by David Griffiths.
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It’s a secret paradise – inside a closed up Harlow Carr
The RHS Chelsea flower has been cancelled for the first time since World War Two.
Instead there will be a virtual flower show about “sharing gardening knowledge” which will go online to the public tomorrow.
With this in mind, The Stray Ferret gained access to the RHS garden at Harlow Carr to provide a virtual tour of the secret paradise that lies behind closed doors.

Harrogate garden centres prepare to re-open as lockdown measures ease
Some garden centres across the borough will be opening their doors to the public from tomorrow, after being closed for seven weeks due to the coronavirus lockdown.
It comes after the government announced on Sunday, that garden centres in England will reopen on Wednesday 13 May as long as they ensure social-distancing measures are in place.

RHS will be opening all four of its plant centres including the one at Harlow Carr.
Sue Biggs, RHS Director General, has said :
“We are pleased to reopen our RHS Plant Centres to bring joy, food and beauty into the lives of thousands of gardeners, and it is hugely encouraging that the Government recognises the vital role gardening and gardens play in supporting positive mental and physical health… We are ever mindful of the world we now live in and will, therefore, be operating with strict safety measures at all our sites to ensure we protect our visitors and staff who we thank for being patient with us at this time.”
Crimple Hall Garden Centre in Harrogate has been offering contactless deliveries to customers during the lockdown, but now as restrictions are lifted they are preparing to open.
Sally Dugdale who is the plant manager at Crimple Hall, told the Stray Ferret that lockdown came at a bad time for garden centres:
“The height of the season is between March and June, so it’s not been good at all for garden centres. We are now hoping that the season is extended with people spending more time in the garden and not going abroad.”
But not all garden centres in the borough are opening tomorrow, with some saying they don’t feel it would be safe for customers or staff.
Heoplants Nursery in South Stainley is remaining closed despite the go-ahead from the government. Deborah Withington, who owns the nursery told the Stray Ferret:
“We have been operating a contactless service since we closed… It has worked really well so we have decided to continue that way for now as we feel that casual visitors and passing trade would pose social distancing issues.”