GOLD CROWN® – golden-yellow hybrid tea rose – Kordes
Like a bright jewel after summer rain, GOLD CROWN® draws the eye with golden blooms carried on a naturally upright habit, ideal for neat front gardens and compact beds in busy urban streets. Its classic hybrid-tea form gives you elegant, long-stemmed blooms for the vase, while a clear, honey-fruity fragrance adds gentle luxury each time you pass. Bred by Kordes for reliable garden performance, this own-root rose establishes steadily, building roots in year one, stronger shoots in year two and full ornamental value by year three. Once settled, its moderate-care maintenance fits a real family routine, coping well with cool, changeable summers and typical British rain and wind in exposed spots. Over the years, its own-root resilience supports a long-lived garden presence, giving you a sustainable, repeat-flowering display that feels both composed and quietly indulgent.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
The strong upright habit and medium-tall height create a clear architectural presence beside a path or doorway, offering structure without overwhelming a narrow London-style front garden; a calm choice for the busy homeowner looking-for-impact-without-fuss |
| Cutting for the vase |
High-centred, goblet-shaped blooms on reasonably long stems provide classic, florist-style roses from your own plot, with reliable repeat flushes so you can cut stems through much of the season and still keep colour outside enjoying-homegrown-bouquets-with-minimal-effort |
| Feature in a mixed border |
The rich golden-yellow flowers stand out against dark green foliage, making a strong feature among perennials such as lavender or salvia; its defined shape anchors looser planting and keeps clay-soil borders feeling intentional wanting-structure-in-a-small-family-garden |
| Long-term garden framework |
As an own-root rose, it gradually builds a robust framework that can regenerate from the base after pruning or damage, supporting decades of ornamental value without regular replacement, ideal for a long-range front-garden plan planning-a-steady-sustainable-garden |
| Weather-tolerant city planting |
This cultivar copes well with cool, breezy conditions, making it reliable for exposed, rain-washed streets where other plants can look battered, offering consistent form and flower in coastal or windy parts of the UK living-with-regular-wind-and-heavy-showers |
| Moderate-care family rose bed |
With medium maintenance needs, it mainly requires seasonal feeding, deadheading and occasional disease checks, fitting comfortably into a realistic care routine for people who enjoy gardening but cannot commit to intensive weekly tasks preferring-straightforward-garden-chores |
| Own-root sustainability choice |
Grafted sections are absent, so there is no rootstock suckering to manage and the plant ages evenly, providing a stable, predictable look over the years and making it well suited to low-intervention, sustainability-minded urban schemes valuing-low-input-long-lived-plants |
| Large decorative container |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good drainage, this upright hybrid tea offers a neat vertical accent on balconies or paved front drives, provided it receives regular watering and feeding to support repeat flowering wanting-container-colour-with-clear-form |
Styling ideas
- Golden-Entrance – Plant as a pair by the front path with low lavender edging to frame the doorway in soft purple and gold – ideal for homeowners upgrading a traditional terrace frontage.
- Urban-Harmony – Combine with sage and silvery foliage plants in a gravel strip to echo warm metals and paving tones – suited to city gardeners seeking calm, low-clutter structure.
- Sunset-Bed – Mix with soft pink lupins and magenta Lychnis for a layered sunset palette – perfect for families wanting cheerful colour without a complex planting plan.
- Cutting-Corner – Group three plants in a sunny border section for a steady supply of stems for the vase – for hobby florists who like regular flowers from a compact space.
- Balcony-Showpiece – Grow one plant in a generous 50‑litre container with trailing nepeta to soften the pot edge – aimed at balcony owners wanting a single, elegant statement rose.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as Goldkrone, marketed as GOLD CROWN® – golden-yellow hybrid tea rose – Kordes; ARS exhibition name Gold Crown, unregistered but firmly established in gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Reimer Kordes, W. Kordes’ Söhne, Germany, around 1960; parentage not recorded. Introduced by Kordes in 1960 and since maintained as a classic golden hybrid tea selection. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holder of the ADR award from 1960, indicating solid garden performance and tested reliability under Central European trial conditions, with particular emphasis on ornamental value and durability. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, medium-tall bush, typically 100–140 cm high and 80–120 cm wide, with moderately dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage and a moderately thorny framework suited to specimen or group planting. |
| Flower morphology |
Classic hybrid tea, medium-sized double blooms with 26–39 petals, high-centred goblet to cupped form on mostly solitary stems, repeating freely with a generous second flush in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep golden-yellow blooms (RHS 14A outer, 13B inner) that open bronzed, then lighten to golden cream with a peach-pink hint before fading; medium colour retention, best definition in full sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Moderate, clearly perceptible scent with a honey-fruity character; noticeable at close range along paths or when cut for indoor use, adding a traditional perfumed-rose impression without being overpowering. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip formation is limited due to the double flowers; where pollinated, it may form small, ovoid, orange-red hips around 10–14 mm in diameter, adding occasional late-season interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –26 to –23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4). Generally resistant to powdery mildew and black spot, with moderate rust susceptibility in humid, still conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well-drained soil; water regularly in prolonged drought. Space 55–120 cm depending on use, allowing airflow. Remove spent blooms and prune annually to keep shape and flowering strength. |
GOLD CROWN® offers refined golden blooms with fragrance, clear structure in compact spaces and the long-term resilience of an own-root plant, a thoughtful choice if you favour lasting, low-fuss elegance in your garden.