The origins of the first botanical garden are based on
Conrad Gessner's (1516–1565) private
herbarium. A Gessner descendant, Johannes Gessner (1709–1790) who was a physician and naturalist, founded Zürich's first botanical garden in 1746, in co-operation with the
Naturforschende Gesellschaft Zürich (Zürich Botanical Society). In 1833, the Canton of Zürich changed this first location to the so-called
Schimmelgut, which was where the University of Zürich was founded. On dissolution of the
ramparts zur Katz in 1837, the still existing plant at the
Schanzengraben moat was built. The garden was designed by the university's gardener Leopold Karl Theodor Fröbel (1810–1907). In 1851 its
Palmhaus (a greenhouse) was opened – constructed of glass and wood, in 1877 the octagonal glass pavilion got an
iron frame. Today, the pavilion is primarily used for concerts, theater and exhibitions. The terrain of the garden was limited by surrounding buildings, whilst the shadows of these buildings hindered growth conditions for the plants. Thus, in the second half of the 20th century, an urgently needed expansion was impossible, and as the botanical buildings were in poor condition, the administration decided to move the gardens from the city center to a more peripheral location within the city, where there was room to expand. In 1971 the
old park of the Bodmer-Abegg family in the Weinegg quarter was selected, and in 1976 the
new botanical garden was opened there. Since 1976 the Old Botanical Garden, as it is now known, has been used as a recreation area, as the location of the
Völkerkundemuseum (ethnological museum) of the University of Zürich, as the site of an
arboretum and of the so-called
Gessner-Garten. == Arboretum and Gessner-Garten ==