Beautiful opportunities can be found in the extraordinary vistas, water features, shady groves, native plants, and colorful seasonal blooms of Texas’s botanical gardens.
LessNestled in downtown Austin's Zilker Metropolitan Park, the 28-acre Zilker Botanical Garden offers a lush escape. Admire heritage live oaks and panoramic views. Explore theme gardens like the Taniguchi Japanese Garden and the Mabel Davis Rose Garden, connected by pathways, streams, and Koi-filled ponds, creating an urban oasis with shady hideaways and sunny lawns.
Northeast of downtown, these 38-acre gardens boast native and imported plants, including 35 endangered species. Explore exotic flora from tropical rainforests and Mexican and South African deserts. Don't miss the enchanting Japanese garden from Kumamoto, San Antonio's sister city. The Texas Native Trail offers a stroll through history with authentic transplanted homes, including pioneer log cabins, an adobe house, and a limestone cabin of early German settlers.
Near the southern part of the renowned Tyler Rose Garden lies a four-acre gem. Vibrant spaces like the Heritage, Shade, and Sunshine Gardens brim with yellow roses, daffodils, irises, and black-eyed Susans. The IDEA Garden showcases innovative gardening practices.
Explore the Rose Garden's 16 hybrid tea rose varieties, A Tasteful Place's ornamental garden and kitchen, and the Woman’s Garden's sculptures and infinity pool. The Jonsson Color Garden dazzles with seasonal plant beds, while the Rory Meyers Children’s Adventure Garden delights with a caterpillar maze and treehouse. Other highlights include distinct gardens featuring crape myrtles, azaleas, magnolias, Japanese maples, a pecan grove, and a fern dell.