Kew Gardens boss advises on Winter Gardens project
- Published
An expert on Victorian glasshouses has visited a restoration project on the Norfolk coast to offer advice.
Richard Barley, director of gardens at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, external, visited Great Yarmouth's Winter Gardens on Tuesday.
He said he was enthused by the £19m investment to restore the last ironwork glasshouse in the UK that sits on a seaside promenade.
The project has been awarded money from the government's Town Deal fund and National Lottery Heritage Fund.
Work is due to start in March 2025 and the venue should be opened in 2027.
Mr Barley said: "This is an extraordinary Victorian glasshouse structure and it's about to be brought back to life.
"It will be fully restored and be turned into a multi-use facility that people should come to enjoy for years into the future, not just local people but it will draw people from across the country and I'm sure internationally as well.
He added: "The project team has been across a range of issues, but some of the things to look at are to do with moisture in the metalwork, drainage with rainfall, temperature moderation, ventilation - so not only the plants, but people can be comfortable year round.
"We have been able to offer a little advice here and there based on our experience at Kew, but I think it will be a great outcome."
Architect Faye Davies said she often overhears tourists who are excited about the restoration and the chance to visit when the work is completed.
She said: "It's actually really invaluable having Kew [Gardens] here, and Richard [Barley] in particular.
"Kew have got 350 years worth of experience of historic glasshouses, so they've been there, done that, got the tee-shirt, so to speak.
"We've presented our design, talked about what the mechanics of things are and he's saying, 'Have you thought about this? Try this,' and we are learning off each other.
"I'm really confident, we've got such an experienced design team on this job. We're going to get this right."
Horticultural and biodiversity consultant Mike Maunder said having advice from Kew Gardens would benefit the entire restoration.
"We're getting advice from one of the masters in the business".
"You're going to see a transformation from a skeleton to a venue which is going to astonish people.
"The great history here in Great Yarmouth is creating places for people to go while they're on holiday and stepping out into another world. We're going to create that other world."
Landscape gardener Jenny Coe said the project will also require involvement from local people.
"We want to invite the community in, the residents and the people who live here as well as the visitors," she said.
"We want people to learn in this place and also to help with the planting and help guide people around."
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