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- The London City Guide -


Back to Places ! Parks and Gardens
             


Botanic gardens and arboreta

Many of the London parks have living botanical collections; Holland Park has a good arboretum, and others have bog gardens, rock gardens, and extensive rose gardens. Queen Mary's Rose Garden in Regent's Park is an outstanding example. Most of the 'great houses' have fine collections of plants, often specialising  in one botanical aspect. Some of the specialist commercial nurseries are almost miniature botanical gardens; for instance Syon Park in Middlesex.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden
Bateman St, Cambridge. (01223) 336265. The first garden was established in 1761 and moved to its present 40-acre (16.2ha) site 3/4 mile (1.2km) south of the city in1846. Extensive collection of living plants; fine specimens of trees and shrubs; glasshouses, pinetum; ecological


Battersea Park SW11
0181-871 7530. An interesting riverside park of 200 acres (81ha) which was a favourite dueling spot in the early 19thC. Redesigned in the 1950s for the Festival of Britain. Boating lake, deer park and children’s zoo. The London Peace Pagoda which stands close to the river was built by monks and nuns of the Japenese Buddhist order Nipponzan Myohoji and completed in 1985. Based on ancient Indian and Japenese designs, it stands at 110ft (33.5m) and has a double roof. The park also contains the Pump House art gallery and a herb garden. All-weather sports surface. Floodlit football pitch. Easter Show. Park, playing fields, athletics track, tennis courts.

Crystal Palace Park SE20
0181-778 7148. Named after Paxton’s 1851 Great Exhibition building which was moved here from Hyde Park and unfortunately burnt to the ground in 1936; the vast, impressive ruins still remain. Now a national Youth & Sports Centre with an Olympic swimming pool and fine modern sports stadium in an open park of 70 acres (28.4ha). Has boating lake with pedalos (in summer). Fishing lake; four islands in the lake are ‘colonised’ by 20 life-sized replicas of primeval animals. Playpark, farmyard, shire horse cart rides, ranger-guided walks, circular maze.

Epping Forrest, Essex
6000 acres (2430ha) of natural woodland, six miles long and two miles wide stretching from Chingford to Epping. It was ‘dedicated to the delectation of the public forever’ in 1878. Many hornbeam, oak, ash, maple, beech and birch trees; it also offers a superb variety of all kinds of natural life – so many gray squirrels that they have become a problem. High Beech is a popular spot and there are large areas to ramble through where you can get thoroughly lost, or even stumble upon the remains of two ancient British camps at least 2000 years old – Loughton Camp and Ambersbury Banks.

Greenwich Park SE10
0181-858 2608. A royal park of 200 acres (81ha) with pleasant avenues lined with chestnut trees, sloping down to the Thames. Impressive views of the river and two classic buildings: the Queen’s House by Inigo Jones and the Royal Naval College (once a Tudor royal palace). Contains the National Maritime Museum and the Royal Observatory. 13 acres (5.3ha) of wooded deer park, a bird sanctuary and Bronze age tumuli. Children’s boating lake; entertainment in summer.

Hampstead Heath NW3
0171-485 4491/0181-455 5183. Open, hilly 800 acres (324ha) of park and woods. Fine views of London. Foxes can sometimes be seen. Crowded on Bank holidays with visitors to the famous fair and the equally famous pubs – the Bull & Bush, Spaniard’s Inn and Jack Straw’s Castle. Includes Parliament Hill (the place for kite-flyers), Golders Hill (containing a fine English town garden) and Kenwood. Ponds, open-air concerts in summer, tennis courts. Olympic track, orienteering, cricket, football, rugby, rounders, horse-riding. Also swimming in Hampstead Ponds, a children’s zoo and bandstand at Golders Hill, and much of interest to the ornithologist (over 100 species). OPEN 24 hrs.

Hyde Park W1
0171-298 2100. A royal park since 1536, it was once part of the forest reserved by Henry VII for hunting wild boar and bulls. Queen Elizabeth I held military reviews here (still held on special occasions). It was the haunt of hughwaymen until 1750 and even today is patrolled at night by police. The Great Exhibition of 1851 was held opposite Prince of Wales Gate. Hyde Park now has 360 acres (137.7ha) of parkland, walks, Rotten Row for horse-riders, and the Serpentine – a fine lake for boating and swimming. The Sepentine Bridge is by George Rennie, 1826. The famous Speaker’s Corner, a tribute to British democracy, is near Marble Arch – public executions were held at Tyburn gallows nearby until 1783. Baseball and soft-ball often played. Bandstand used in summer. OPEN 05.00-24.00.

Kensington Gardens W8
0171-298 2117. A formal and elegant addition to hyde Park; when the gardens were first opened to the public, soldiers, sailors and servants were not allowed in ! 275 ACRES (111.4HA) of royal park containing William III’s lovely Kensington Palace, Queen Anne’s Orangery, the peaceful ‘Sunken Garden’ nearby, the Round Pond, perfect for sailing model boats, and, on the south, the magnificent Albert Memorial – the nation’s monument to Queen Victoria’s husband. The famous Broad Walk, originally flanked by ancient elms, is now replanted with fragrant limes and maples, and the nearby ‘Flower Walk’ is the home of wild birds, woodpeckers, flycatchers and tree-creepers. Queen Caroline produced both the Long Water (Peter Pan’s statue is here) and the Serpentine by ordering the damning of the Westbourne river. A stone balustrade seperates the Long Water from formal ponds and fountains. Good children’s playground with the Elfin Oak, carved with lots of birds and animals.

Regent’s Park NW1
0171-486 7905. A royal park of 472 acres (191ha), it was originally part of Henry VII’s great hunting forest in the 16thC. The Prince Regent in 1811 planned to connect the park (and a new palace) via the newly built Regent Street to Carlton House. Although never fully completed, the design (1812-26) by John Nash is of great distinction. It forms two concentric circles – the Inner with gardens and Outer with Regency terraces and imposing gateways. Contains London Zoo, the Regent’s Canal, a fine boating lake with 30 species of birds, a bandstand, fragrant flower gardens and the very fine Queen Mary’s Rose Garden. It is also home to the golden-domed London Mosque. Open-air theatre. Restaurant and cafeterias. Sports facilities include football, baseball, softball, cricket, hockey and rugby. There are also tennis courts and an athletics track.

Richmond Park, Surrey
0181-948 3209. The largest and wildest of London’s royal parks; 2358 acres (954.2ha) first enclosed as a hunting ground by Charles I in 1637. Retains all the qualities of a great English feudal estate – a natural open park of spinneys and plantations, bracken and ancient oaks (survivors of the great oak forests of the Middle Ages) and over 600 red and fallow deer. Badgers, weasels and the occasional fox can be seen. Pen Ponds are well stocked with fish. Fine views of the Thames valley from White Lodge (early 18thC and once a royal residence) and the restaurant of Pembroke Lodge. Golf, riding, polo (for spectators), rugby, football.

Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Kew Road, Richmond, Surrey. 0181-940 1171. Superb botanical gardens of 300 acres (121.5ha). Founded in 1759 by Princess Augusta. Delightful natural gardens and woods bounded by the river on one side, and stocked with thousands of flowers and trees. The lake, aquatic garden and pagoda were designed by Sir William Chambers in 1760. The magnificent curved glass Palm House and the Temperate House, 1844-8, are by Decimus Burton. Beneath the Palm House is a Marine Display which has examples of flowering marine plants and coral reef. The Princess of Wales Conservatory houses orchids and cacti, and water lilies the size of mattresses. Kew’s scientific aspect was developed by its two directors Sir William and Sir Joseph Hooker and the many Famous botanists who worked here. 17thC Queen’s Garden with formal rosebed. Cafeteria and gift shop in the Orangery. 1-hr tours available from the Victoria Gate Visitor Centre.

St James’s Park & Green Park SW1
0171-930 1793. St James’s Park is the oldest royal park, acquired in 1532 by henry VIII, laid out in imitation ‘Versailles’ style by Charles II and finally redesigned in the grand manner for George IV by John Nash in the 1820s. A most attractive park with fine promenades and walks, and a romantic Chinese-style lake, bridge, and weeping willows. The bird sanctuary on Duck Island has some magnificent pelicans and over 20 species of duck and goose. Good views of Buckingham Palace, the grand sweep of Carlton House Terrace, the domes and spires of Whitehall and, to the south, Westminster Abbey. The Mall and Constitution Hill are frequently part of ceremonial and royal occasions. Bandstand used in summer. Green Park is just that – a welcome green space in the heart of London with an abundance of lime, plane and hawthorn trees.

Victoria Park E9
0181-985 1957. With  217 acres (87.9ha) and a four-mile perimeter, this park was known as ‘the lung of the East End’; it is also the oldest enclosed park, established in 1845 by Sir James Pennythorne (who also laid out Battersea Park). Several listed historical buildings survive; of note are two alcoves from the original London Bridge which were placed at the east end of the park in 1861, a splendid drinking fountain erected for Burdett Coutts, and two gate pillars at Bonner Bridge. The four gate lodges also date back to 1850. Of natural interest are planes, oaks, birches, hawthorns, cherries, honey locusts, gladitsia, a Kentucky coffee tree and a bitter orange. Also fallow deer and various fowl. A wide variety of sports facilities for football, tennis, cricket, bowling, hockey and softball; athletics track; fishing lake. Children’s play areas.

 

 

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