Entrance Zone
Around a third of all Kew's million or so visitors come in through
the Main Gate on Kew Green. It is one of the most historic areas,
since it is where the original Botanic Garden founded by Princess
Augusta was first established.
Today, the area is relatively mixed, mainly open lawns interspersed
with trees and plantings. It is crossed by a number of formal pathways,
often with avenue plantings, including Nesfield and Burton's Broad
Walk and Little Broad Walk.
From the Main Gate, visitors pass the Nash Conservatory on the
right, brought in from Buckingham Palace by King William IV, to
reach the Orangery, itself one of Kew's earliest buildings and now
a popular and very elegant café-restaurant.
In contrast, White Peaks is a striking modern building, combining
an exhibition space with a refreshment area and shop. Next door,
Climbers and creepers, opened in June 2004, proves Kew's determination
to make serious botany great fun for children with Britain's first
interactive botanical play zone.
The Ice House tells how laborious it once was to preserve food
and enjoy cold drinks in summer. Today on grey days at the turn
of the year, the Winter Garden around it pleases the eye with colourful
shrubs and fills the air with scent. Nearby, the splendidly gnarled
Pagoda Tree is one of Kew's oldest specimens, while on the Mound,
there is a plaque denoting the site of the World Environment Day
Time Capsule, buried in 1994.
Kew's beautiful Lilac Garden had an old music hall song written
about it by Alfred Noyes, who exhorted us to 'Come down to Kew in
Lilac Time'. The Secluded Garden was designed to please all the
senses and appeals not only with colourful and perfumed plantings,
but also rippling water and rustling leaves.
Continue the tour
Main
Gate
Orangery
Colour
Spectrum
White
Peaks
Climbers
and creepers
Lilac
Garden
Broad
Walk
Ice
House & Winter Garden (+ Pagoda Tree and Mound)
Secluded
Garden
Back
up to: Kew Zones
Carry
on to: North Eastern Zone
Find out more
History
of the Entrance zone
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