Museum No 1 and Plants+People Exhibition
Museum No 1
This Grade II listed building, overlooking the lake opposite the
famous Palm House, was designed by Decimus Burton and opened in
1857. Its aim was to illustrate mankind's dependence on plants,
and it housed the Economic Botany Collections augmented by Sir William
Hooker, and included tools, ornaments, clothing, food and medicines.
In February 1996, the National Heritage Memorial Fund, financed
by the National Lottery, announced the award of £1.4 million
to Kew to help renovate the museum and it opened again in 1998.
Today, the upper two floors accommodate Kew's rapidly expanding
education programme covering a wide range of activities from international
diploma courses to school information services. The ground floor,
open to the public contains the Plants+People exhibition, with collections
on display in a dozen of the original mahogany cabinets.
Plants+People Exhibition
This fascinating exhibition highlights the variety of useful plants
around the world and celebrates people's ingenuity and craft skills
in using these riches.
Displaying some of Kew's diverse Economic Botany Collections, the
exhibition charts some of the vital uses of plants:- as food and
drink maintaining our health and well-being; their use for clothing
and ornament; and as fuels, papers, toys and musical instruments.
By using interactive touch-screens, visitors can find out just
how much they know (and amusingly don't know!) about the plants
that enter their own daily lives.
Continue the tour
Back
up to: Palm House Zone
Carry
on to: Palm House Pond and Terrace
See also
Kew's
History & Heritage: Museum No. 1
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