As a result, Hloba moves to live on the land that was formerly his lower allotment, becoming the present day location.
[4] Hloba extended the lowland garden to the future Sadovaya Street (now St. Andriy Fabra), from the lake that once stood where the Ozerka market now stands.
The garden's species collection grows throughout this time, reaching 945 plant genera in 1837, and 20,000 seedlings are sold annually.
The park and the Poltava School of Horticulture were included under the newly established Ministry of State Property in 1837.
Though the school that served as its foundation lasted until 1858, the Katerynoslav Botanical Garden is progressively deteriorating since the death of its founder in 1848.
[5] The technical section was leased, research spaces and greenhouses remained, and a gardening school reopened.
[9] Newspapers from December 1935 stated that the pioneers of the spawn-in school and the Komsomol inhabitants of the locomotive repair factory sought to construct a children's railway in the city together.
[5] Nazi Germans are said to have carefully disassembled the railway equipment during World War II and planned to transport it to Germany.
The Lazar Hlobe obelisk-memorial was taken down in 1936 to make room for the Children's Railway, and a replacement monument wasn't placed there until 1972.
[10] The Dnipro City Council decided to name the pedestrian lane in Hloba Park in honor of John Paul II on 17 August 2022.