SUNRISE – orange climbing rose - Kordes
Bring a sense of post-rain balance to a small urban front garden with SUNRISE, a compact climbing rose that fits neatly against a London terrace wall while coping steadily with cool summers and frequent showers. Its semi-double, high-centred blooms open in waves of vivid orange, softening through peach and pink for a long, colourful season that keeps your entrance welcoming with very little effort. As an own-root shrub, SUNRISE is bred for dependable longevity, quietly rebuilding a strong underground framework so it can reshoot if stems are knocked by wind or pruning errors. You simply plant once in enriched, well-drained soil and let the plant do the gradual work of establishing, with roots filling out in year one, strong new canes in year two and full ornamental impact by year three. Medium maintenance needs and solid disease resilience mean fewer chemical treatments, supporting a more sustainable, rainwater-friendly garden design. Its glossy dark foliage provides a tidy, evergreen-like backdrop for the warm-toned flowers, giving your front path or balcony a composed, uplifting accent from late spring well into autumn.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Terraced-house front wall or railings |
Climbing to around 1,4–2,2 m with a bushy habit, SUNRISE is ideal for training on railings, porch posts or narrow walls without overpowering a small façade. It offers a long flowering display from late spring to autumn for busy urban garden owners. |
| Rainwater-friendly entrance bed |
This rose appreciates regular moisture yet dislikes waterlogging, making it well suited to a mulched, free-draining bed that channels roof or path runoff without puddling for long periods. It works beautifully in permeable front gardens for sustainability-minded homeowners. |
| Mixed border with perennials |
The warm orange to peach-pink colour shift blends easily with soft purples and whites, while the medium height and dense foliage give structure among perennials. It partners well with plants like lavender or salvia for beginner flower gardeners. |
| Standalone feature on an obelisk |
In a small to medium family garden, SUNRISE can be trained up an obelisk or narrow support to create a vertical focal point without taking much ground space. Repeat flowering keeps the feature attractive for time-poor hobby gardeners. |
| Large container on balcony or patio |
Planted in a 40–50 litre peat-free container with good drainage, this own-root climber offers years of colour on a balcony balustrade or patio corner, and can regenerate from the base if canes are winter-damaged for city flat dwellers. |
| Family side path or back gate |
The moderate thorniness and medium growth make it practical along a side path or back gate where it can be loosely tied to wires or mesh. Semi-double flowers and dark green leaves keep the space cheerful yet manageable for family garden owners. |
| Informal flowering hedge |
Planted at 50 cm intervals, SUNRISE forms a loose, flowering screen with dense, glossy foliage and repeating flushes of orange-toned blooms. It offers a softer alternative to evergreen hedging, with manageable upkeep for low-effort gardeners. |
| Small park or community garden feature |
With moderate disease resistance and a robust own-root constitution, SUNRISE suits shared spaces where reliable structure and colour are needed over many years and care may be occasional rather than intensive for community garden volunteers. |
Styling ideas
- Soft Sunrise Welcome – Train SUNRISE over a simple black railing, underplant with lavender and nepeta to cool the warm orange tones – ideal for townhouse owners wanting a calm, fragrant entrance.
- Peachy Rain-Garden – Combine SUNRISE with moisture-tolerant perennials in a gravel-mulched, free-draining bed that guides rainwater from downpipes – suited to eco-conscious front-garden renovators.
- Balcony Vertical Glow – Grow SUNRISE in a 40–50 litre container with sage and trailing thyme, tying stems to a slim trellis for height – perfect for balcony gardeners seeking low-fuss drama.
- Family-Friendly Arch – Let SUNRISE scramble over a narrow arch at the garden entrance, softened with catmint at the base – great for families wanting a pretty feature that is easy to keep in shape.
- Urban Cottage Mix – Pair SUNRISE with white liatris, hemp-agrimony and compact grasses for a relaxed, wildlife-hinting border – best for beginners aiming at a cottage look in limited space.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Sunrise Climbing rose KORmarter (registered as KORmarter), a large-flowered climber/shrub rose; ARS exhibition name ‘Sunrise’, marketed here as SUNRISE – orange climbing rose - Kordes. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by W. Kordes & Sons in Germany from an unknown seedling × ‘Lichtkönigin Lucia’; introduced and registered in 1988, representing classic Kordes breeding for garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy climbing habit reaching about 1,4–2,2 m in height with 0,6–1,2 m spread; dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; suitable for walls, fences, arches and obelisks. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, high-centred, pointed-budded blooms in clusters, with 13–25 petals and large flower size; remontant, producing an abundant second flush and further flowers in mild conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep warm orange base (ARS OB; RHS outer 33A, inner 14B) with pinkish margins; buds copper-orange, ageing through peach-yellow with pale pink edges; colour lightens more quickly in strong sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength fragrance, clearly noticeable in the garden; detailed scent notes are not documented, but the variety is considered pleasantly scented for paths, entrances and seating areas. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally low due to semi-double flowers; when produced, hips are small, spherical, 6–11 mm diameter and orange-red, adding a light decorative effect in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); disease resistance moderate overall, with good black spot resistance and moderate tolerance of powdery mildew and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in fertile, well-drained soil with regular watering and feeding; partial shade is tolerated, though flowering is richest in sun; spacing 50–90 cm depending on hedge, group or specimen use. |
SUNRISE – orange climbing rose - Kordes offers long-season colour, compact vertical structure and the regenerative security of an own-root plant; a thoughtful choice if you want lasting impact from a modest, manageable planting.