View across The Long Water to Kensington Palace
Kensington Gardens, once the
private gardens of Kensington Palace
, is one of the Royal Parks of London
, lying immediately to the west of Hyde
Park
. Most of it is in the City of
Westminster
, but a small section to the west is in the Royal Borough
of Kensington and Chelsea
. The park covers an area of 111 hectares
(275 acres).
The open spaces of Kensington Gardens,
Hyde
Park
, Green
Park
and St. James's Park
together form an almost continuous "green lung" in
the heart of London between Kensington
and Westminster
.
History
Kensington
Gardens was carved out of the western section of Hyde Park and designed c.1728-1738 by Henry Wise and Charles Bridgeman, with fashionable
features including the Round
Pond
, formal avenues and a sunken Dutch garden. Long after they had been
opened to the public, the King asked his Prime Minister the
possible cost of enclosing them again: the reply was "a
Crown".
Charles
Bridgeman created the Serpentine
in the 1730s by damming the eastern outflow of the
River
Westbourne
from
Hyde
Park
for Queen
Caroline. The part of the Serpentine that lies within
Kensington Gardens is known as "The Long Water". At its
north-western end (originally the inflow of the River Westbourne)
in an area known as "The Italian Garden", there are four fountains
and a number of classical sculptures.
At the foot of the
Italian Gardens is a parish boundary marker, delineating the
boundary between Paddington
and St George Hanover Square parishes, on the exact
centre of the Westbourne
river.
Kensington Gardens are generally regarded as being the western
extent of the neighbouring Hyde Park from which they were
originally taken, with West Carriage Drive (The Ring) and the
Serpentine Bridge forming the boundary between them. The Gardens
are fenced and more formal than Hyde Park. Kensington Gardens are
open only during the hours of daylight, whereas Hyde Park is open
from 6 am until midnight all year round, which includes many hours
of darkness.
Kensington Gardens were long regarded as smarter than Hyde Park
because of its more private character around Kensington Palace.
However,
in the late 1800s, Hyde Park was considered the more "fashionable"
of the two because of its location nearer to Park Lane (Mayfair)
and Knightsbridge, adjoining the entrance to central London
opposite Wellington
Arch
and was therefore more crowded.
The land surrounding Kensington Gardens was predominantly rural and
remained largely undeveloped until the
Great Exhibition in 1851.
Many of the original
features survive along with the Palace, and now there are other
public buildings such as the Albert Memorial
(at the south-east corner of Kensington Gardens,
opposite the Royal
Albert Hall
), the Serpentine Gallery
, and Speke's
monument.
The park
also contains the Elfin
Oak
, an elaborately carved 900—year old tree
stump.
Cultural references
The park is the setting of
J.M. Barrie's book
Peter Pan in Kensington
Gardens, a prelude to the character's famous adventures in
Neverland. The fairies of the gardens are
first described in
Thomas Tickell's
1722 poem
Kensington Gardens. Both the book and the
character are honoured with the
Peter Pan
statue located in the park.
The
Infocom interactive fiction game
Trinity begins in the Kensington
Gardens. The player can walk around many sections of the gardens,
which are described in moderate detail.
The park is a prominent aspect of the short horror novel
The
Beast, Ashley McClung, due to the events of the opening and
closing chapters occurring at this location.
Gallery
Image:Italian Garden fountains.jpg|Italian Garden
fountainsImage:London Serpentine Bridge from East.jpg|The
Serpentine Bridge seen from Hyde ParkImage:London Kensington
Gardens The Long Water.jpg|The Long Water looking north-west from
the Serpentine BridgeImage:Kensingtonpalacesnow.jpg|The gardens and
palace in winter
Image:Hyde Park Albert Memorial Jan
2006.jpg|The Albert
Memorial
Image:PeterPan Statue Londres.jpg|Statue of
Peter PanImage:FL 17722007.jpg|Kensington Palace
GardensImage:Physical Energy, Kensington.jpg|
Physical
Energy by
G. F. WattsImage:Physical Energy sculpture
2.jpg|
Physical Energy sculpture
References
- http://www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/kensington_gardens/
External links