The Kibble Palace is a 19th-century
wrought iron and
cast-iron-framed glasshouse, covering 2137 m2. Originally designed for John Kibble by architects James Boucher and James Cousland for his home at
Coulport on
Loch Long in the 1860s, the components were cast by
Walter Macfarlane at his
Saracen Foundry in
Possilpark. Eventually brought up the
River Clyde by barge to the Botanic Gardens, it was fully erected at its current location in 1873 by Boyd of
Paisley. The building structure is of curved
wrought iron and glass supported by
cast-iron beams resting on ornate columns, surmounted on masonry foundations. It was initially used as an exhibition and concert venue, before being used for growing plants from the 1880s.
Benjamin Disraeli and
William Ewart Gladstone were both installed as
rectors of the
University of Glasgow in the palace, in 1873 and 1879 respectively – its last use as a public events venue, before becoming wholly used for the cultivation of
temperate plants. The main plant group is the collection of New Zealand and Australian
tree ferns, some of which have lived here for 120 years and which now form the national tree fern collection. In the 1920s a statue was added in the palace to "King Robert of Sicily", a figure from the works of the American poet
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. This is by the Scottish sculptor
George Henry Paulin. In 2004 a £7 million restoration programme was initiated to repair severe corrosion of the ironwork. £3.4M of the cost came from the National Lottery Heritage Fund and other grants support including from Glasgow City Council and Historic Environment Scotland. The restoration involved the careful dismantling of the palace, and the removal of the parts to Shepley Engineers in
Shafton,
South Yorkshire for specialised repair and conservation. Their workshop had already dealt with glasshouses from Dublin and Liverpool and removal permitted the reconstruction of the strengthened plinth. To enable this the plant collection was removed completely for the first time ever, and the ironwork was re-assembled over a re-arranged internal floor layout, giving the palace a prolonged life. It re-opened to the public in November 2006. The building contains a large collection of
orchids,
carnivorous plants and
tree ferns.
Sculptures in Kibble Palace •
King Robert of Sicily (a hero created by
Longfellow) by
George Henry Paulin (1927) •
Cain by Edwin Roscoe Mellins (1899) •
Eve by
Scipione Tadolini () •
Ruth by Giovanni Ciniselli (1880) •
The Sisters of Bethany by
John Warrington Wood (about 1871) •
The Elf by
William Goscombe John (1899) •
Stepping Stones by
William Hamo Thornycroft (1878) •
The Nubian Slave by Antonio Rossetti () File:Glasgow Botanic Gardens. Kibble Palace. John Warrington Wood - "The Sisters of Bethany" (about 1871).jpg|The Sisters of Bethany Image:Glasgow Botanic Gardens. Kibble Palace. William Goscombe John - 'The Elf', 1899.jpg|The Elf Image:Glasgow Botanic Gardens. Kibble Palace. Edwin Roscoe Mullins - 'Cain' (c. 1899).jpg|Cain ==Library==