ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ – light pink tea-hybrid rose – Olesen & Olesen
With its porcelain-pale blooms and strong sweet, fruity scent, ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ brings a sense of coastal refreshment to compact British gardens, thriving even where breezes carry a hint of salt spray and autumn storms test your garden’s structure. This upright hybrid tea delivers generous, repeat flowering from summer into autumn, with XL, high-centred blooms perfect for cutting, while its glossy, dark foliage stays handsome on the plant. In a 2-litre own-root form it establishes steadily, building a reliable root system that anchors it well and helps maintain long-term stability, so you can plan borders confidently. In the first year it concentrates on roots, the second on stronger shoots, and by the third year it reaches full ornamental presence with calmer maintenance needs. Its medium disease resistance suits hobby gardeners ready for simple, occasional care, and its balanced height and spread make layout planning in small to medium plots pleasantly straightforward.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose near a coastal veranda seating area |
The upright habit, medium height and XL, porcelain-like blooms create a calm, elegant screen beside shingle or decking, pairing beautifully with sea kale or Festuca in wind-kissed sites that still enjoy good shelter from the harshest gales for coastal-style beginners. |
| Cutting patch for home-arranged vases |
High-centred, exhibition-style flowers on long, straight stems give you reliable stems for indoor arrangements, with a strong sweet, fruity scent that fills small rooms and makes every impromptu tea or supper feel considered and gently indulgent for busy homeowners. |
| Statement container on a sunny, sheltered balcony |
Performs well in a large 40–50 litre pot where roots have room to anchor, giving a vertical accent without overwhelming the space, especially effective in pastel schemes with lavender and low grasses for compact-space gardeners. |
| Focal point in a small front garden bed |
A single plant offers clear structure and long-season interest, its glossy foliage and pastel flowers looking neat against brick, gravel or shingle, helping frame paths and doorways without complicated pruning plans for time-pressed residents. |
| Mixed border with perennials and ornamental shrubs |
Medium height and upright growth weave easily between Verbena hastata, lupins or compact laurels, providing repeat flushes of soft colour that knit the planting together over several seasons, suiting long-term border planners. |
| Long-term design element in family gardens |
The own-root form supports gradual regeneration after pruning or weather stress, helping the plant remain a dependable presence in the same spot for years, ideal where you prefer steady structure over frequent replanting as practical owners. |
| Compact hedge or row along a path or low fence |
Planted at 50–60 cm intervals, the dense foliage and upright habit form a floral corridor that guides views without blocking light, while repeat flowers keep the line attractive through the school-holiday months for family-garden users. |
| Perfumed relaxation corner with seating |
The strong, sweet, fruity fragrance is concentrated in each bloom, so even a small grouping beside a bench or bistro table can perfume the air after a day on the beach, echoing that feeling of salty, windy, sunny reset for reflective garden visitors. |
Styling ideas
- Coastal-Pastel Nook – Combine ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ with silvery Festuca and sea kale in a gravel bed, using one or two plants as upright anchors beside shingle paths – ideal for coastal-style lovers wanting soft, wind-tolerant elegance.
- Porcelain Cut-Flower Row – Plant a short, straight row in a sunny strip with Verbena hastata at the back, giving you a constant supply of long-stemmed, pastel blooms for jugs and vases – for hobby florists who value homegrown arrangements.
- Veranda Centrepiece – Grow one plant in a 50 litre clay pot flanked by low lavender, letting the rose provide height and scent while the lavender softens the pot edge – perfect for balcony and veranda owners short on ground space.
- Front-Garden Welcome – Set a single plant near the front door with clipped evergreen structure behind, using its glossy foliage and refined flowers to greet visitors – suited to homeowners wanting polish without complex planting.
- Family Relaxation Corner – Group two or three plants by a bench with lupins and soft grasses to create a quietly scented reading corner that matures gracefully over the years – for families seeking a low-fuss, long-lived retreat.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as POUlht001, marketed as Royal Copenhagen™ Hybrid Tea POULSEN® POUlht001; ARS exhibition name Royal Copenhagen; part of the Hybrid Tea POULSEN® collection. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Denmark in 1994 by L. Pernille and Mogens Nyegaard Olesen for Poulsen Roser A/S; parentage unknown seedling × ‘Tivoli’; registration in 2004 with later international introduction. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised for its garden and exhibition qualities with a Gold Medal at the 2002 Monza International Rose Competition, confirming both ornamental appeal and performance under trial conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea reaching around 75–105 cm in height and 50–70 cm spread, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; weak self-cleaning so deadheading maintains neatness and repeat display. |
| Flower morphology |
Large XL, double, fully formed hybrid tea blooms with 26–39 petals, solitary on stems, high-centred and pointed like classic cut roses; remontant habit ensures a good second flush after the main summer flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Light pastel pink with subtle lavender tint; buds pale and silky, opening to pure light pink then soft powder-pink, often nearly white before petal drop, with better colour intensity and retention in cooler weather conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, sweet, fruity perfume typical of scented hybrid teas; fragrance is pronounced enough to be enjoyed individually or in small groups near seating or paths, especially effective in still, warm evening conditions. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional spherical hips form, 10–14 mm in diameter, coloured red (RHS 40A); modest in number and size so they add discrete late-season interest without dominating the plant’s overall appearance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 4, USDA 5b); medium disease resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, performing reliably with basic preventive care and balanced watering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well-drained soil; avoid prolonged drought by regular watering in dry spells, especially in containers; suitable for borders, specimen use, hedging lines and large (40–50 L) containers for terraces or balconies. |
ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ offers strongly scented, porcelain-pink blooms, reliable repeat flowering and a long-lived, regenerating own-root habit; a thoughtful choice if you want lasting elegance from a single, manageable rose.