The Green Ark in figures
Construction cost:
18,6 milion €
Duration:
Construction began in 2019 and was completed in 2024.
Green Ark:
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Approximately 7600 m² (visitor pavilion included)
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10 000 plant taxa; of each taxon 3 specimens
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22 greenhouses make up the Green Ark
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8740 m2 of glass was incorporated in the roofs, another 2631 m2 in the side walls
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the visitor pavilion is 12 metres high and is divided over 2 levels
Seedbank:
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2.5 million seeds of 700 species of wild indigenous plants
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4.5 million seeds of 230 species of beans and their wild relatives
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113 samples of wild banana species
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911 samples of copper plants from Katanga
Builder: Meise Botanic Garden with the support of the Agency for Facility Operations and Tourism Flanders
Design team: NU architectuuratelier & Archipelago
Execution: Bouwbedrijf Van Poppel, Deforche Construct, Bosman Van Zaal, Hertsens infra, Viva Pintura street art, Flexitec elevators
Focus on the seed bank; five priority plant groups
Belgian endangered flora
Meise Botanical Garden houses the only seed bank in Belgium. Among other things, it aims to preserve endangered and rare wild species of Belgian flora. Seeds from more than 1000 populations of about 600 species are kept (today already samples of 70% of the Belgian red list species)
Wild beans
The genera Phaseolus and Vigna are particularly well represented. Legumes are important worldwide as protein suppliers in the diet. The collection aims to preserve the long-term genetic variation of this group and is therefore kept frozen.
Wild bananas
Wild bananas have seeds, so we can easily store them in our seed bank, securing genetic diversity for the future. Since 2016, Botanic Garden Meise has managed a collection of seeds of wild bananas. Unique in the world. The collection contains seeds of some 20 different species and about 150 samples, mainly from Papua New Guinea and Australia. Flanders has a lot of expertise in banana research. The Botanic Garden's seed bank is one of the pillars of this.
Copper plants of Katanga
The copper belt of Katanga in the Democratic Republic of Congo consists of hills with extremely high concentrations of copper in the soil. For most plants, this metal is toxic, but some 600 species have adapted to the copper-rich soil. Thirty-two of these species are unique to this location and occur nowhere else. Endangered by mining activities, this flora is a valuable resource for vegetation restoration programmes, for stabilising and remediating soils contaminated with heavy metals. The Botanical Garden's seed bank is the only one in the world to preserve 65 species (966 samples) of Katangese copper flora according to international standards so that this unique flora remains available for future generations.
Own collection
To provide enough seeds for sowing, seeds are continuously harvested from our own plant collection. We also collect seeds for research purposes and for exchange with 600 other institutions. We store seeds of more than 1,000 plant species for a relatively short period of time, at a temperature of 15°C and low humidity (15% RH).