GRANDE AMORE ® – red hybrid tea rose – Kordes
Classic hybrid-tea elegance meets modern reliability in Grande Amore, a compact, upright rose that slips naturally into small British front gardens and neat borders. Its large, high-centred blooms bring a deep, radiant red accent that holds its colour even in strong sun and showery spells, coping well with typically changeable weather and occasional coastal winds. Bred by Kordes and supplied as a pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL 2‑litre own-root plant, it settles steadily, building a durable framework rather than demanding constant attention. With simple deadheading and basic feeding, you can enjoy well-shaped, long-stemmed flowers for cutting as well as a smart garden display. Over successive seasons the roots strengthen, the shrub fills out and by the third year it shows its full ornamental presence, combining long-term value with minimal fuss for everyday gardeners. Ideal where you want dependable impact from a single focal plant or a small, easy-to-manage group.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point near the entrance |
The upright habit and tidy spread make Grande Amore ideal as a welcoming focal point by a gate, path or front door, giving a clear, structured presence without overpowering small spaces. With simple annual pruning it keeps a formal outline and produces repeat flushes of scarlet blooms right where they are most visible for busy homeowners. |
| Small mixed border in a family garden |
Its moderate height and dark, slightly glossy foliage allow Grande Amore to sit comfortably in a mixed border with perennials and shrubs, providing vertical accents and reliable repeat flowering. The persistent bright-red blooms read clearly against greens and pastels, helping to keep the border looking composed even when other plants are between peaks for beginner gardeners. |
| Classic hybrid-tea cutting row |
Large, high-centred flowers on straight stems make this variety well suited to a short cutting row or a dedicated strip along a path or fence. You can harvest formal, exhibition-style flowers for the house while encouraging further blooms outside, combining ornamental value with practical use in a small space for style-conscious gardeners. |
| Compact rose bed or small group planting |
Planted in groups of three to five at the recommended spacing, Grande Amore forms a cohesive, upright stand with coordinated bloom height and consistent colour. The repeat flowering and even habit create a simple, high-impact feature bed that requires only light maintenance and straightforward deadheading for time-poor gardeners. |
| Partially shaded side garden or passage |
This rose tolerates partial shade, so it can brighten side gardens or paths that receive sun for only part of the day. In these positions the strong red flowers remain vivid, while the plant maintains a balanced framework, providing structure and colour where many sun-loving shrubs would underperform for urban homeowners. |
| Formal hedge or low structural row |
Using the closer hedge spacing, Grande Amore can be trained into a low, formal row that defines driveways or separates areas of the garden. Its upright growth simplifies clipping and winter pruning, and the strong, colourfast blooms lend a smart, ordered look that suits traditional front gardens and more contemporary layouts for design-focused gardeners. |
| Large patio container or terrace planter |
In a sizeable container of at least 40–50 litres with good drainage, this rose becomes a striking feature for paved areas, balconies or terraces. Regular watering and basic feeding support repeat flowering, while the compact footprint keeps it manageable and easy to position near seating or doors for patio gardeners. |
| Exposed but well-drained border in changeable weather |
Grande Amore performs reliably in typical British conditions when given well-drained soil, handling sun, showers and breezier spots with flowers that keep their colour and shape. As an own-root shrub it gradually builds a stable frame and deeper root system, so each year brings stronger shoots and fuller display for practical gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Contrast – Combine Grande Amore with soft pink geraniums and white campanulas to offset its structured blooms, creating a relaxed, low-input cottage edge for romantically inclined beginners.
- Formal Axis – Use pairs of Grande Amore to mark path entries, underplant with low box or dwarf yew for year-round definition and easy clipping, suiting owners of classic front gardens.
- Evening Border – Plant with pale foxgloves and silvery foliage like artemisia so the bright red flowers stand out at dusk, ideal for families who enjoy the garden after work.
- Cutting Corner – Dedicate a sunny corner to a small group, interplanted with Hypericum ‘Miracle’ for berries, to supply vases with long-stemmed blooms and textural fillers for home decorators.
- Patio Showcase – Place a single plant in a generous terracotta pot, with trailing lobelia at the rim, to give concentrated colour beside seating for balcony and terrace users.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as KORcoluma, marketed as Grande Amore ® within the Eleganza® collection; also known by the exhibition name Grande Amore in American Rose Society listings. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Tim-Hermann Kordes in Germany from ‘Christoph Columbus’ crossed with an unnamed seedling; introduced and registered by W. Kordes’ Söhne in 2004 after breeding work begun in 1995. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holder of multiple international honours including Golden Rose of The Hague 2004, gold medals at Lyon 2006 and Rose Hills 2011, and RHS Award of Garden Merit and Portland Best Hybrid Tea in 2012–2013. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, upright shrub 80–105 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, with moderately dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickling; requires deadheading as spent blooms do not self-shed efficiently. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, high-centred hybrid-tea blooms with 26–39 petals, borne mainly singly on stems; repeat flowering is strong, with a generous second flush following the main summer display when managed with regular deadheading. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Uniform bright red (RHS 45A outer, 45B inner) with a slightly glossy surface; buds open from deep dark red to vivid fire-red, darkening slightly with a wine-red tinge while maintaining excellent colour and rain resistance. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Displays a very light, tea-like scent that is barely perceptible in the garden; the double form and faint fragrance mean it is grown primarily for visual effect rather than for strong perfume or pollinator attraction. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip formation is generally limited due to the fully double flowers, though occasional small, spherical orange-red hips 8–12 mm in diameter may develop late in the season on un-deadheaded stems. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7; USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); tolerates heat if watered in droughts, with moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust under typical garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to borders, specimen planting, low hedging and cutting; medium maintenance with routine feeding, watering and plant protection as needed, plus regular deadheading and pruning to maintain form and repeat flowering. |
GRANDE AMORE ® offers compact structure, vivid colourfast blooms and reliable repeat flowering on a durable own-root framework, making it a thoughtful choice for easy, long-lived garden impact.