LONDON, May 3 — With 15,000 new panes of glass, the UK’s Royal Botanical Gardens in Kew will reopen its famed Temperate House on Saturday after a five-year restoration that cost £41 million (RM218.9 million).

More than 69,000 items have been cleaned and replaced in the vast Grade I-listed building, billed as the world’s largest Victorian glasshouse and home to 10,000 plants, including some of the rarest from the world’s temperate regions.

The 4,880 square-metre glasshouse, built in 1860, had been in a state of disrepair, according to officials at the Unesco World Heritage site which attracts more than one million visitors a year.

The glasshouse was closed for the works, with a tent structure large enough to cover three Boeing 747 planes enclosing the building in southwest London.

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The vast project required 180km of scaffolding, 5,280 litres of paint and more than 400 people working on it, with the lengthy process of re-planting starting in September. — Reuters