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Central London Gardens

London is not only a city of busy markets and buildings but also a has ample of open spaces and gardens. From huge Royal parks to less significant community parks, central London gardens is a city that has heaps of open spaces, and the gardens are well liked by young and old. Almost all the gardens do not have any entry fee and so are a popular spot in the summer.

You will get a comprehensive list of all the gardens and parks which are popular, beautiful and are like a oasis in the concrete jungle. Here is a short list of all the parks of central London gardens.

»Central London Gardens
»Battersea Park
»Coram's Fields
»Green Park
»Holland Park
»Hyde Park
»Jubilee Gardens
»Kensington Gardens
»Primrose Hill
»Regent's Park
»St James's Park
»Victoria Embankment Gardens
»Victoria Tower Gardens

Chelsea Physic Garden is a botanical garden founded in 1673. It was set to examine the medicinal function of plants. It played a very important role in the advancement of the science of botany and horticulture.

Green Park lies to the north of Buckingham Palace. It is the park where Charles II took a leisurely walk. The park is famous as a the meeting ground for duelists and maybe a corpse must be lying on the peaceful grass.

Hampstead Heath is the leading open space in Greater London, the heath was once dwelling of highwaymen. The green space has the best panoramic view of the city and is a popular outlet for its citizens. The historic Kenwood House is on the northern boundary of the heath.

Henry VIII used Hyde Park as a hunting ground. Hyde Park's nature comes from the Serpentine Lake which is a home to waterfowl and sweating oarsmen. Rotten Row is famous for its horse-riding area and is on the southern boundary of the park. On Sunday mornings at the Speaker's Corner which is by the Marble Arch entrance, you can listen to soap-box orators.

Kensington Gardens You can not make out actual different between Hyde Park and Kensington Park, however the characters of the parks are quite diverse. At one time Kensington Gardens was a part of Hyde Park, but it was enclosed by William IV and it became the gardens for Kensington Palace to the west. The Kensington Gardens made inway which is more systematic and formal than Hyde Park. It even has a sunken garden along with a rectangular pond by the palace. Statue of Peter Pan Kensington, which was written by JM Barrie, donated the children's swings nearby.

Primrose Hill is an open space of 62 acres on a high hill which gives outstanding panoramic views of central London. Primrose Hill at one time was a part of the same royal forest as Regent's Park

Regents Park was once the royal hunting ground of Marylebone Park. Regent's Park was redeveloped by the Prince Regent- George IV. The Inner Circle of the park now has the Queen Mary's Garden, fed by the underground Tyburn River. There is room for sailing, tennis, archery, and boating on the Regent's Park Canal.

St. James Park is just like an oasis. It gives a feeling of calm in the bustle of the West End, St. James Park is surrounded by The Mall and Birdcage Walk, at the same time as its westernmost end lies virtually on the doorstep of Buckingham Palace. The region was a deer park under Henry VIII, a formal garden under Charles II, and was remodeled into its present tranquil air by John Nash in 1828. The central lake is home to large populations of ducks and pelicans.

Battersea Park is at the side of river and has got a sub-tropical and wildflower gardens, a deer park, a miniature railway for children, and a small zoo.

Bushy Park is a delightfully informal Bushy Park, however the double-row of enormous chestnut trees planted by Christopher Wren strikes the only formal note. Langford River was built by the order of Charles I in the park and was as a source of water for Hampton Court.

200 acres of open space is the area of Crystal Palace. It derives its name from the iron and glass exhibition hall built for the Great Exhibition of 1851. The Crystal Palace was shifted to the Crystal Palace Park in 1854, but burned down in 1936. There are excellent sports facilities in the park.

Epping Forest is a 12 mile belt of green is a despondent remainder of the vast forest which once covered all of southern England. The northern segment is thick with trees, punctuated by wide green parkland. There is a refuge for black fallow deer, and livestock graze in the woods. There is a museum of the area's natural history palced in the Queen Elizabeth's Hunting Lodge along with a half-timbered 15th century house.

Greenwich Park Charles II commissioned Andre Le Notre who designed Versailles to formalize the hunting. Much of the treed park is the work of Le Notres but there is also the small Wilderness home to a herd of fallow deer and a large play area. The former Royal observatory is on the western edge of the park, while to the south is Queen's House, and the Royal Naval College.

Hampton Court Palace has everything - including superb formal gardens of great variety, and open parkland. There is the famous hedge maze, and also a few other famous gardens like the Tudor knot garden, Rose Garden, Privy Garden, and Herb Garden. Hampton Court is the garden where the yearly flower festival is held.

Holland Park was once upon a time the private garden of Holland House. You can view the formal flowerbeds of tulips and roses, yucca and irises. Formal pathways in this garden leads it to have a very business like air.

Kew Gardens has got almost three hundred acres of botanical delights. Once upon a time the gardens were royal property, but since 1841 have been open to public. The Palm House is a marvel of glass, and other Victorian greenhouses are home to a vast selection of exotic plants from around the world.

Morden Hall Park is just like an oasis in the heart of suburbs covering over 125 acres of parkland. It has the River Wandle meandering through it. There is an old Snuff Mill which has been converted to an environmental center and a variety of bridges traversing the river. The park has hay meadows, old estate buildings and an extraordinary rose garden with over 2000 variety of roses. The workshops is home to the local craftworkers and there is also an independently run garden center and a city farm.

Osterly Park gardens are the formal gardens around the house at Osterley. Though this park was formally designed it has been carefully landscaped to look natural. It is an area of over 100 acres of quiet countyside in the middle of bustle of urban London.

In Richmond Park deer wander all the way through the former royal estate, enclosed by Charles I. King Henry's Mound was built so that Henry could watch the deer being hunted. There are ponds for model boating and angling, and a variety of exotic shrubs and flowers.

Syon Park is the Britain's one of the first gardening center of London. The park itself was laid out by Capability Brown but it has the centrepiece of the glass Conservatory, with superb tropical plants.

It is just a brief overview of the parks of central London gardens, you have to visit them to enjoy them.

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