
Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston, Massachusetts
Photo Credit: Tower Hill Botanic Garden/Mala Lam Photos
4 New England Indoor Garden Escapes
New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill Boylston, Massachusetts
After you've strolled the outdoor Winter Garden at Tower Hill (even in the colder months there's always something to see and admire), pop inside to warm up in The Orangerie, an 18th-century-style greenhouse, and enjoy the winter-blooming plants in the cathedral-like The Limonaia from October through May.Dartmouth College Life Sciences Greenhouse Hanover, New Hampshire
A dose of summer can be had every weekday at this handicapped-accessible teaching facility filled with 1,000 different orchids and 600 or so tropical, subtropical, and succulent plants. Every half dozen years or so, the greenhouse’s most famous inhabitant—a gargantuan corpse flower nicknamed “Morphy”—comes into bloom, and thousands turn up to experience its notorious stench. And if you like to linger, you can “picnic” in the foliage-filled multipurpose room.
Lyman Estate Greenhouses Waltham, Massachusetts
The urge to shed layers will hit you almost as quickly as the perfume of jasmine, bougainvillea, and citrus as you close the door of one of America’s oldest greenhouse complexes behind you. Newly renovated for better accessibility, the four brick-and-glass structures burst with a variety of living oddities and heirlooms. Visit in March to see the 1820 Camellia House’s century-old specimens in radiant bloom.
Roger Williams Park Botanical Center Providence, Rhode Island
New England’s largest indoor garden is a 23,000-square-foot terrarium that shows off plant life in its myriad forms, from delicate flowers to spiky cacti to pest-eating carnivorous species. Frequent public events include talks on gardening topics and opportunities to create in this inspiring space.