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  1. www.kew.org › whats-in-the-gardens › palm-housePalm House | Kew

    9 de may. de 2024 · Kew is home to the oldest pot plant in the world, which has been growing in the Palm House for more than 250 years. Explore this remarkable indoor rainforest and discover tropical plants from some of the most threatened environments in the world.

  2. The Palm House is a large palm house in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in London, that specialises in growing palms and other tropical and subtropical plants. It was completed in 1848. Many of its plants are endangered or extinct in the wild.

  3. La Palm House o Casa de la Palmera es un invernadero de estilo victoriano, 1 ubicado en el Real Jardín Botánico de Kew (Londres). Construida entre 1841 y 1849 por el arquitecto Decimus Burton y el ingeniero Richard Turner, 2 la Palm House fue la primera gran estructura de hierro fundido erigida en Inglaterra, y está considerada ...

  4. 9 de ene. de 2019 · Built between 1844 and 1848, the breathtaking Palm House is still at the heart of Kew Gardens, offering a hot and humid environment for our tropical plants to thrive. But what are the little-known facts about this magnificent Victorian glasshouse?

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  5. 6 de jul. de 2020 · 614. 32K views 3 years ago KEW GARDENS. Join Kew Horticulturist, Richard Moore on a walk around the Palm House at Kew Gardens! Immerse yourself in the tropical rain forest within one of...

    • 11 min
    • 32.7K
    • The Botanical Gardener
  6. Today the Palm House is one of Kew’s most recognisable buildings having gained iconic status as the world’s most important surviving Victorian glass and iron structure. The Palm House recreates a rainforest climate, a living laboratory supporting a unique and diverse collection of tropical plants from some of the most threatened ...

  7. Kew’s Palm House, designed by Decimus Burton and constructed by Richard Turner in 1844, is one of the Gardens’ most recognizable buildings. Known for its elegant walls of glass and iron, the structure was highly innovative for its time and was rooted in methods and forms used in shipbuilding.