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Belfast Botanic Gardens

Botanic Gardens Belfast
Flower bed, Botanic Gardens, Belfast - geograph.org.uk - 1454550.jpg
Palm House and flower bed
Type Botanical
Location Belfast, Co. Down
Coordinates 54°34′55″N 5°55′52″W / 54.582°N 5.931°W / 54.582; -5.931Coordinates: 54°34′55″N 5°55′52″W / 54.582°N 5.931°W / 54.582; -5.931
Area 28 acres (110,000 m2)
Opened 1828 (1828)
Owned by Belfast City Council
Status Open All Year
Collections
Public transit access Botanic railway station
Website Botanic Gardens

Botanic Gardens is a public park in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

Occupying 28 acres (110,000 m2) of south Belfast, the gardens are popular with office workers, students and tourists. They are located on Stranmillis Road in Queen's Quarter, with Queen's University nearby. The Ulster Museum is located at the main entrance.

The gardens opened in 1828 as the private Royal Belfast Botanical Gardens. It continued as a private park for many years, only opening to members of the public on Sundays prior to 1895. Then it became a public park in 1895 when the Belfast Corporation bought the gardens from the Belfast Botanical and Horticultural Society. The Belfast Corporation was the predecessor of Belfast City Council, the present owner.

The gardens' most notable feature is the Palm House conservatory. The foundation stone was laid by the Marquess of Donegall in 1839 and work was completed in 1840. It is one of the earliest examples of a curvilinear cast iron glasshouses in the world. Designed by Charles Lanyon and built by Richard Turner, Belfast's Palm House predates the glasshouses at Kew and the Irish National Botanic Gardens at Glasnevin, both of which Turner went on to build. The Palm House consists of two wings, the cool wing and the tropical wing. Lanyon altered his original plans to increase the height of the latter wing's dome, allowing for much taller plants. In the past these have included an 11 metre tall Globe Spear Lily. The lily, which is native to Australia, finally bloomed in March 2005 after a 23-year wait. The Palm House also features a 400-year-old Xanthorrhoea .


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