Nash Conservatory
John Nash designed four conservatories for Buckingham Palace in
1825. Under William IV, the decision was taken to move one of these
to Kew in 1836 during remodelling of the Palace by architect Edward
Blore, Nashs replacement.
Eighty feet long, forty feet wide and twenty-six feet high, the Nash Conservatory
was re-erected at Kew at a cost of £3,498 on a site chosen by William IV.
The conservatory was then modified by Sir Jeffrey Wyatville, and a heating system
of hot-water pipes designed by A.M.Perkins installed.

The Nash Conservatory (circled) at Buckingham Palace, before it was transferred to Kew in 1836.
The Nash Conservatory first housed palms, but after the construction of the
Palm House in 1848 it became home to Australian flora, such as the eucalyptus
and the monkey puzzle tree. In 1862 these were removed to the newly-built
central range of the Temperate House and replaced by tropical climbers,
mainly from South America and South East Asia, and it then became popularly
known as the Aroid
House.
It was ultimately closed after providing temporary shelter for plants removed
during the restoration of the Palm House in the 1980s. By this time the temperatures
required to sustain the plants had damaged the fabric of the building, necessitating
its renovation.
The restored conservatory is used as an exhibition space.
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See also
Kew's
History & Heritage: Main Gate
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