City centre gardens to fully reopen on Friday
Hull City CouncilQueen's Gardens in Hull will fully reopen on Friday after a three-year regeneration project.
The work included new boundary walls, paving, accessible ramps and steps, and new landscaping and tree planting.
Hull City Council said it was designed to create a welcoming and inclusive green space for residents and visitors.
Council leader Mike Ross said: "Queen's Gardens is one of Hull's most loved green spaces, and it's fantastic to be able to fully reopen it to the public following such a significant and carefully delivered transformation."
Hull City CouncilQueen's Gardens sits on the site of the former Queen's Dock, which was filled in during the 1930s.
In recent years, sections of the gardens were closed to the public because of health and safety concerns linked to structural deterioration, with the full scale of the problems becoming apparent only when the regeneration work got under way, the council said.
It meant a large part of the project involved engineering work beneath the surface to improve ground conditions, and the rebuilding of the perimeter walls, which were in danger of collapsing.
Hull City CouncilThe gardens closed for the work on 1 June 2023. It was originally expected to take 14 months and cost £14m, but it ultimately cost £21m.
The project led to some surprises, including the uncovering of a mosaic tiled floor during a clean-up of a pond and the discovery of a cast-iron cannon, which is thought to date back to the 17th Century.
BBC/Becki BowdenRos Southern, director at Southern Green Landscape Architects, said: "This project has not been about papering over the cracks.
"Hull has done a proper job, starting with the required engineering, making tough decisions such as removing unsafe trees, and then adding high quality design and materials to create a park landscape that will last for many years to come."
The Queen's Gardens project is part of the wider Hull Maritime regeneration programme which includes the refurbishment of Hull Maritime Museum, the creation of a new visitor attraction at North End Shipyard – home to the restored Arctic Corsair – and the restoration of Spurn Lightship, which opened in March.
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