Great news: Most of the park has reopened. (The section between 30th St. & 11th Ave. will remain closed.) Bundle up & come out!
This Valentine’s Day, adopt a High Line plant and you’ll receive a digital certificate of adoption to send to your loved one.
The High Line’s planting design is inspired by the self-seeded landscape that grew wild for 25 years after the trains stopped running. Wandering through our gardens, you’ll find perennials, grasses, shrubs, and trees that were chosen for their hardiness, sustainability, and ever-changing textures and colors in all four seasons.
Download the plant listThe High Line’s planting design is inspired by the self-seeded landscape that grew wild for 25 years after the trains stopped running. Wandering through our gardens, you’ll find perennials, grasses, shrubs, and trees that were chosen for their hardiness, sustainability, and ever-changing textures and colors in all four seasons.
Download the plant listEnrich your experience with this digital guide to our gardens, art, history, and more—plus useful visitor information.
Download the AppAdopt a High Line insect for yourself or as a gift!
You or a recipient of your choice will receive a certificate of adoption via email, along with the satisfaction of knowing you’re helping the High Line and its tiniest residents thrive.
The High Line’s aesthetic reflects natural cycles of life and death, and evokes feelings of being in a wild space. According to Piet Oudolf, who designed our gardens, “My biggest inspiration is nature. I do not want to copy it, but to recreate the emotion.”
These landscapes don’t just happen on their own. While many natural processes take place in the park, the gardens have also been carefully designed and continuously cared for. Shaping the landscape design requires a good eye and an understanding of how the plantings will evolve over time. Changes in the gardens are guided by a team of gardeners who have collaborated with Oudolf for years.
We create different moods and compositions throughout the seasons. Hundreds of plant species evoke the patterns of woodlands and grasslands. Birds and insects thread through and animate the plantings. The mood of each garden changes through the year, conveying the ever-changing wonder and mystery of wild places.
Walk just a few blocks along the High Line and you’ll pass through several, incredibly different gardens.
We are committed to environmental sustainability in all of our gardening operations and maintenance, including Integrated Pest Management, composting on-site, and pollinator-friendly practices.
Learn more about sustainabilityMany gardens cut back their plants in fall. At the High Line, we leave our displays of dried leaves, stalks, and seedheads standing through the winter, providing both beauty for visitors and habitat for birds and other animals. To make room for new spring growth, hundreds of volunteers join our gardeners every March to complete the massive task of cutting back our plants by hand, to be composted and returned to the soil.
Learn more about Spring Cutback and how to volunteer'' Seasonal change occurs in a near-infinite succession of small moments, and learning to see and understand these little happenings is a worthy lifetime pursuit.'
Be part of the deep care and effort that goes into keeping the High Line wild—and free for everyone.
Give nowAdditional support for Horticulture on the High Line is provided by Greenacre Foundation.