Crowdfunder launched inviting the public to support Dundee’s Covid Community Memorial Garden

Crowdfunder launched inviting the public to support Dundee’s Covid Community Memorial Garden

On Monday 10th November 2025, UNESCO City of Design Dundee launched a Crowdfunder inviting the public to support the creation of Dundee’s Covid Community Memorial Garden. Contributions will go towards this free, permanent memorial garden and greenspace which will be situated next to Moncur Crescent Playpark, on Caird Avenue.

The Crowdfunder will close on Friday 30th January and donations can be made by visiting: https://crowdfunder.co.uk/p/dundee-covid-community-memorial

Dundee’s Covid Community Memorial Garden, due to be installed by Autumn 2026, will be a colourful labyrinth where people can come together to reflect and connect with others and nature.

The garden is the outcome of Dundee’s participation in a national project across 32 local authority areas in Scotland called Remembering Together. The project has encouraged communities to collectively commemorate loved ones who lost their lives, reflect on the difficult times, and remember their positive experiences. It has been a space to celebrate the ways communities were brought together during this time and heal as a nation.

The public are invited to donate to Dundee’s Memorial in commemoration of their loved ones or to memorialise their own experiences of the Covid pandemic. Donors can choose to select one of three tiered rewards or donate smaller amounts of money.

By donating £20, donors will receive a packet of wildflower seeds for planting in their own garden or community. By donating £50, donors will receive a packet of wildflower seeds and a Corten steel bird decoration to display in their own home or garden. Finally, by selecting the top tier of a £100 donation, these donors will receive both rewards and will be allocated a bird on the garden’s central artwork.

 

Crowdfunder launched inviting the public to support Dundee’s Covid Community Memorial Garden
Crowdfunder launched inviting the public to support Dundee’s Covid Community Memorial Garden

 

The garden’s central artwork will include a sculptural display of birds in flight mirroring the natural waves, curves and shapes in the planting. Birds often have connotations of the changing of seasons, freedom of movement and new beginnings, reminding us of our loved ones. They were selected as the artworks’ motifs by local communities in collaboration with designers, Old School Fabrications.

The memorial’s materials of Corten steel and timber, as well as perennial planting have been considered with longevity, low maintenance and sustainability in mind. The design has been well considered in regard to maintenance and designed to ensure that the space is safe and inviting to visit.

The Memorial design was developed from a series of conversations and workshops with local communities, delivered by design studio Around Zero. The workshops were held across Dundee and invited people to reflect on their Covid experiences and to define what a pandemic related memorial would look like for them. The final design created by design studio Old School Fabrications reflects the emotional twists and turns of Covid but also encourages people to take time out of their day to enjoy fresh air and connect with nature.

Kirsten Wallace, Project Coordinator, UNESCO City of Design Dundee said:

“We have launched this Crowdfunder to help realise the community’s full ambition behind this co-designed Covid Memorial for Dundee. This fundraiser provides an opportunity for those who were not previously involved in the Memorial’s co-design phase to now be a part of its creation.

“Those who generously donate £100 and above, will be allocated their own memorialised bird shape within the Garden’s central artwork, as well as receiving their own Corten steel bird ornament and a packet of wildflower seeds.”

Lucy Binnie, CLD Youth Worker and project participant, said:

“It is exciting to see our original ideas for Dundee’s Covid Community Memorial come to life. We designed the Memorial to include a labyrinth that people can walk through and take a moment to reflect.

“We’re really pleased with the Memorial’s location at Moncur Crescent, as it was important for our design to be located close to a playpark for children and young people, who were impacted by isolation during the Covid pandemic.”

Estelle Coulthard, former Family Support Coordinator, Home-Start Dundee and project participant said:

“I lost my grandfather to Covid and never had the opportunity to say goodbye. The Memorial Garden will give me a place to sit and share my memories with others and allow our younger generation to have a fun place to find out how Covid affected our lives.”

Need this in a different language?