Put the verbs into a suitable tense in the passive.
Mary has just arrived home from work. Neil is already there.
Mary: Hi! I’m back. Sorry, I’m late.
Neil: What kept you?
Mary: I had to use the ring road and I … (stick) in a traffic jam for forty minutes.
Neil: Why didn’t you use the usual route?
Mary: Because the road … (close) until work on the access road to the new hospital ... (complete).
Neil: When is it due to … (finish)?
Mary: Well, the access road … (open) by the Mayor next week, according to the newspaper, and the Health Minister … (invite) to open the hospital on the same day, but they don’t know yet whether she’s definitely coming.
Neil: A lot of money … (waste) if she doesn’t come.
Mary: Why’s that?
Neil: Haven’t you seen all those rose bushes that … (plant) round the hospital?
Mary: So? They’ll be lovely for the patients.
Neil: But the patients won’t be able to see them, because they are round the entrance, and the wards look out in the other direction. A lot of people protested about it, but all their complaints … (ignore) until it was too late.
Mary: If they had money to spare, it … (spend) on facilities for patients, not on making the front look pretty for the Minister.
Neil: Absolutely. It’s typical of this local council. They … (elect) to save money, but they do just the opposite.
Mary: Perhaps they … (throw) out at the next election.
Neil: I hope so. Now, are you ready for supper?
The structure somewhat resembles a horseshoe, bent its edges to the assumption Cathedral, located on the columns. Such a "horseshoe" appearance of the gazebo is due, according to the legend, the fact that it is on the Cathedral square of the city on the second day after the battle of Poltava took place the meeting of craftsmen of Poltava with the Russian Tsar Peter I, and, like, a local blacksmith immediately expertly shod Tsar's horse who lost a horseshoe during the Poltava battle