Corrida™ hybrid tea rose – Sauvageot
Bring a sense of calm drama to a small London front garden with the velvety red Corrida™, an upright hybrid tea that combines elegant colour, reliable structure and reassuringly low maintenance for busy homes. Bred for modern gardens, it offers strong health against common fungal problems even where air is damp after showers, helping it cope gracefully with wetter spells and challenging, heavier soils and drainage. Its dense, glossy foliage gives season-long coverage, while the long, straight stems produce classic exhibition-style blooms that are ideal for cutting and displaying indoors. Planted as an own-root shrub, it develops steadily – first building roots, then stronger shoots, before reaching its full ornamental value in about three years – so you can look forward to a long-lived investment in a compact, sustainable city garden.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose for a small front garden |
The upright, compact habit keeps Corrida™ neatly within its 75–100 cm height range, ideal for narrow front gardens or alongside a path. Dense, glossy foliage gives a smart, finished look even between flushes of bloom for appearance-conscious homeowners |
| Formal row or low hedge along a path |
Recommended spacings of 30–35 cm allow you to create a precise, low hedge that reads as a single band of rich red when in bloom. Uniform structure and straight stems keep the line tidy with only basic pruning needed for time-poor beginners |
| Rainwater-friendly border in heavy soil |
Once established on its own roots, Corrida™ copes reliably where rain collects and soil is on the heavier side, provided basic drainage is in place. Strong disease resistance means foliage remains clean even in humid, post-rain conditions valued by urban gardeners |
| Cutting patch for home arrangements |
The classic hybrid tea form on long, straight stems is bred for vases and exhibition-type displays. Large, double blooms in a steady sequence make it easy to cut bouquets through the season for flower-loving families |
| Accent rose in a mixed perennial bed |
Its deep, velvety red colour holds well from bud to fade, giving a strong focal point among softer perennials such as dwarf lavender, low yarrow or compact penstemon. This stable, saturated colour reads clearly even from the pavement for design-minded neighbours |
| Own-root long-term specimen |
Planted as a solitary shrub at around 55 cm spacing, Corrida™ gradually builds a permanent framework without the graft issues of budded roses. If winter or pruning knocks it back, new shoots arise from its own base, preserving the variety for pragmatic owners |
| Low-input family garden rose |
With good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, this variety typically needs only basic feeding and annual pruning, rather than constant spraying or fussing. It suits households wanting reliable flowers with minimal ongoing effort from busy parents |
| Large container on balcony or terrace |
In a 40–50 litre peat-free container, Corrida™ keeps a strong vertical shape without overwhelming small spaces, while its dense foliage covers the pot visually. Regular watering with saved rainwater supports steady flowering for environmentally aware residents |
Styling ideas
- Townhouse Welcome – Plant a single Corrida™ by the front step, underplanted with low yarrow for soft texture and year-round structure – ideal for style-conscious city homeowners.
- Velvet Ribbon – Create a short hedge along the path with evenly spaced plants, edging with dwarf lavender to contrast scent, colour and form – perfect for neat, formal front gardens.
- Balcony Statement – Use one plant in a 50 litre container with gravel mulch and a slim obelisk, giving height and drama without clutter – suited to compact balconies and roof terraces.
- Cutting Corner – Group three shrubs in a sunny bed with penstemon and nepeta, ensuring a steady supply of straight-stemmed blooms for indoor vases – great for home flower arrangers.
- Evening Focus – Position Corrida™ where street lighting or house lights catch its deep red petals, backed by dark green foliage for a theatrical night-time effect – appealing to urban night-garden enthusiasts.
Technical cultivar profile
| Trait |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Corrida™ hybrid tea rose, exhibition hybrid tea type; ARS exhibition name Corrida, commercial type hybrid tea rose, verified cultivar authenticity and offered as an own-root 2-litre plant. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Bernard Sauvageot for NIRP International in France, with breeding work completed in 1995; introduced to the market in 2005 as a modern hybrid tea suited to both garden and cutting use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy plant 75–100 cm high and 40–60 cm wide, with dense, dark green glossy foliage and moderate prickles; spent blooms usually require deadheading as self-cleaning is considered weak. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, typically borne singly on stems; remontant flowering with a particularly generous second flush, providing an extended display in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Velvety, even deep red flowers (RHS 53A outer, 46B inner) from bud to full bloom, with very good colour retention and only a gentle fade to medium red and slight raspberry edge just before petals drop. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and often barely perceptible, making Corrida™ a variety chosen primarily for its visual impact, colour stability and structural qualities rather than for scented garden situations. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is limited due to the double flowers; when formed, hips are small, ovoid, red (RHS 46A) and around 9–13 mm in diameter, usually of minor ornamental significance in typical garden settings. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Shows good resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust under normal care. Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3) when properly established and mulched. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, specimen planting and cutting; plant 30–55 cm apart depending on use, at 8–9 plants/m² for mass effect. Prefers sun to light shade with well-drained soil and standard rose feeding. |
Corrida™ hybrid tea rose offers compact structure, enduring colour and low-effort health in a long-lived own-root form; consider it as a steady, characterful choice for your garden.