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Main Gate
Over the centuries, the entrances to the Royal Botanic Gardens
have changed according to differences in division by ownership and
by use of the site.
The Grade II listed Main Gate on Kew Green was designed by Decimus
Burton in 1845 and completed the next year. Its very presence signified
a remarkable change of attitude on the part of Kew's management,
because when Sir William Hooker became Director, he no longer required
visitors to be personally escorted by gardeners.
At the end of Hooker's first year, some 9,000 people passed through
this grand entrance with its coat of arms and ornamental foliage.
The railway reached Richmond; another branch from Brentford to Willesden
brought passengers to 'Kew Junction', river steamers made the Gardens
a regular stop; and by 1850, attendance had reached the heady heights
of over 150,000 visitors a year. Today, visitors number around a
million annually, with around a third of them coming in through
the Main Gate.
Continue the tour
Back
up to: Entrance Zone
Carry
on to: Orangery
See also
Kew's
History & Heritage: Main Gate
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