In a quiet corner of Newlands, Milton Keynes, something genuinely extraordinary is growing. It has a nave, transepts, a chancel, an apse, and a lady chapel. It has arched corridors and a peaceful interior. It has been standing — quietly, slowly, magnificently — since 1986.
It has no stone. No stained glass. No roof.
It’s made entirely of trees.
What is the Tree Cathedral?
The Tree Cathedral is a landscape artwork created in 1986 by landscape architect and artist Paul Ayres. Trees — including lime, hornbeam, cherry, and others — were planted in the precise geometric layout of a traditional Gothic cathedral.
As the trees have grown over nearly four decades, they’ve created something that no architect could have planned: natural vaulted corridors where branches meet overhead, green archways that frame views across the planting, and a quality of light and silence that genuinely does feel cathedral-like.
The hedgerows form the walls. The tree canopies form the vaults. The gaps between plantings form the windows.
It is one of the most quietly extraordinary places in England. And it is in Milton Keynes.
Visiting the Tree Cathedral
Address: Newlands, Milton Keynes MK5 6AX
Entry: Free — always
Open: Year-round, any time
Parking: Street parking nearby
Best times to visit:
– Spring (April–May): Blossom on the cherry trees. Green beginning to emerge on the hedgerows.
– Summer (June–August): Full leaf — the vaulted corridors at their most enclosed and atmospheric.
– Autumn (September–November): The colour change is extraordinary — golds and reds creating a stained glass effect without glass.
– Winter (December–February): Bare branches create a skeletal cathedral outline against the sky. Surprisingly beautiful in its own way.
Getting there on foot: The Tree Cathedral connects to the Redway network — accessible by bike or on foot from much of South MK.
Tips
💡 Go early morning or late afternoon — the light through the tree canopy is best at these times and the space is usually empty.
💡 Take your time — the Tree Cathedral is small enough to walk through in minutes but deserves a slow wander. Sit in the central crossing. Look up at the canopy. It rewards patience.
💡 Combine with Howe Park Wood — a five-minute walk from the Tree Cathedral, Howe Park Wood is an ancient broadleaf nature reserve. The two together make a brilliant free half-morning out.
💡 Most people have no idea it exists — even long-term MK residents. Tell someone about it.
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