Outdoor Gardens
Walking through the campus and exploring our outdoor gardens really paints the picture of how the entire campus was designed as a botanic garden, so integrated are these spaces within the campus. Discover all the gardens we put time and care into.
Capen Garden
For just over 100 years, Capen Garden has been both a quiet, beautiful sanctuary and a place of learning. This space features a small water fountain that lures in guests to the centerpiece perennial border designed by Syretha Brooks ’08. Other elements include a rose arbor, the Jill Ker Conway gazebo (named in honor of Smith’s first woman president) and surrounding tulip and annual beds, as new beds that showcase research in ecology, conservation and sustainability.
Happy Chace 1928 Garden
Located behind the president’s house, this terraced garden overlooks Paradise Pond and the Mill River. Named in honor of the late Beatrice “Happy” Oenslager Chace 1928, the garden has an open air pavilion and fragrant pathways that navigate this modern day play on monastic physic gardens that were the forebears of modern botanic gardens.
Japanese Garden
The Japanese Garden was built to demonstrate harmony with nature and offer a serene space for contemplation and reflection. It’s situated on the wooded hillside beside Paradise Pond, below the president’s house. Built in the 1980s in collaboration with the departments of East Asian Studies and the Department of Religious and redesigned in 2017, the garden incorporates elements of Japanese design within the context of a New England setting.
Systematics Garden
The Systematics Garden features a diverse array of flowering plant species, arranged in beds so as to reflect the current scientific understanding of their evolutionary relationships to each other. Students can observe and compare flower types and growth forms among the garden’s species, chosen for their botanical and evolutionary interest. As one of our oldest gardens, it not only holds Smith’s history of learning, but also the centuries-long quest of the botanical science community to better understand how plants became what they are today.
Rock Garden
Home to roughly 800 types of alpine, dwarf and woodland plants, the Rock Garden is the most intensely cultivated area on campus. Created in 1897, it’s modeled after the Rock Garden in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and is the oldest rock garden in North America.
Rose Garden
Redesigned in 2019, the terraced rose garden on the slope below the President’s House is an outstanding display of stunning rose cultivars. This collection was curated to showcase the best of pest and disease resistant rose selections as well as the contributions of women to the world of hybridization and ornamental horticulture.