The Millennium Seed Bank ProjectSave a species

The Wellcome Trust Millennium Building

Looking towards the public entrance

The Wellcome Trust Millennium Building (WTMB) is home to the Millennium Seed Bank Project. It is located at Wakehurst Place in West Sussex and is an integral part of the Wakehurst Place visitor experience, together with the Mansion and gardens. The WTMB opened in 2000.

Inside the Orange room

As well as providing space to store thousands of seed samples in a large underground vault, the WTMB includes advanced seed research and processing facilities, and a state of the art exhibition about seed conservation and the Millennium Seed Bank Project. The exhibition area is housed in the Orange Room, which is located between the two laboratory wings. The public can observe seed research and conservation in action in the laboratories visible through glass walls.

"Inner Compulsion" by Peter Randall Page - the sculpture can be seen outside the WTMB.

 

The interactive exhibition allows you to find out how seeds are collected from the wild and what happens to them when they first arrive at the WTMB. You can also discover how seeds are stored in the Millennium Seed Bank itself and why it is important that seeds are stored for the future. Some of the diversity of UK native flora is shown in the eight parterres just outside the WTMB, which show habitats from the seashore to the uplands.

Vaulted roof and glass wall

The Wellcome Trust Millennium Building was designed by the London-based architects Stanton Willliams. An important aspect of the brief was that the design of the building was in character with its location at Wakehurst Place. Stanton Williams created a low-level building with barrel-vaulted roofing, inspired by the surrounding landscape forms. The main materials used for the external walls and roof were fair-faced concrete, sand blasted to expose the aggregate in specific areas, York stone, painted steel and structural glass panels. The building has been designed to maximise energy conservation, while providing the best possible conditions for seed storage.

 

 

Page last updated: 30 March 2007