In 1892, a committee of senior monks, members of the royal family and former officers of the king, including Atumashi Sayadaw (the Abbot of
Atumashi Monastery),
Kinwon Min Gyi U Kaung (chancellor), Hleithin Atwinwun (minister of the royal fleet),
Yaunghwe Saopha Sir Saw Maung and Mobyè Sitkè (a general of the royal army), was formed to start restoration works with the help and donations from the families of the original donors according to custom and also from the public. It was the
sitkè who asked permission from the senior monks to plant the
hkayei star flower trees as well as some
meze (
Madhuca longifolia) trees. Gold letters were replaced with black ink which made it easier to read. The metal
htis of the
kyauksa gus were replaced with stone paid for by members of the royal family (155), former officers of the royal army (58),
Shan Saophas and Myosas (102), and public donations (414). In 1913 Sir Po Tha, a rice trader of
Rangoon, had the pagoda repaired and regilded. The next year, the Society of Pitaka Stone Inscriptions gave an iron gate to the south left open as the carved wooden panels had been destroyed by the soldiers. The west gate was donated by the famous
zat mintha (theatre performer)
U Po Sein the following year, and the north and east gates by the children and grandchildren of King Mindon in 1932. In 1919 the hermit
U Khandi led the rebuilding of the south and west
saungdans (covered approaches). ==UNESCO inscription==