The
Royal Parks of London
are lands
originally owned by the monarchy of England
or the
United
Kingdom
for the recreation (mostly hunting) of the royal
family. They are part of the hereditary possessions of the
Crown.
The public does not have any legal right to use the Parks, as
public access depends on the grace and favour of the Crown,
although there may be public rights of way across the land. The
Royal Parks Agency manages the Royal Parks under powers derived
from s22 Crown Lands Act 1851. As part of its statutory management
function the Agency permits the public to use the Parks for
recreational purposes, subject to regulations issued under the
Parks Regulation Acts 1872–1926 which are considered necessary to
secure proper management, preserve order and prevent abuse within
the Parks. The current regulations are the Royal Parks and Other
Open Spaces Regulations 1997
With increasing urbanisation of London, some of these were
preserved as freely accessible open space and became public
parks.
There are today eight parks formally
described by this name and they cover almost of land in Greater London
.
- Bushy
Park
, 445 hectares (1,099 acres)
- The Green
Park
, 19 hectares (47 acres)
- Greenwich Park
, 74 hectares (183 acres)
- Hyde Park
, 142 hectares (350 acres)
- Kensington Gardens
, 111 hectares (275 acres)
- The Regent's Park
, 166 hectares (410 acres)
- Richmond Park
, 955 hectares (2360 acres)
- St. James's Park
, 23 hectares (58 acres)
- Brompton Cemetery
, 16.5 hectares
Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens (which are adjacent), Green Park,
Regent's Park and St James's Park are the largest green spaces in
central London. Bushy Park, Greenwich
Park and Richmond Park are in the suburbs.
Brompton
Cemetery
, although not a park, is another of the green
spaces managed by Royal Parks.
They are managed by
The Royal Parks
(an
executive agency of the
Department for
Culture, Media and Sport) and are policed by the
Royal Parks Operational
Command Unit of the
Metropolitan Police (the English
section of the previous force policing the parks, the
Royal Parks Constabulary, has been
abolished). The main form of funding for the Royal Parks is a
central government grant. This contrasts with most of London's
other parks, which are funded by local borough councils. The Royal
Parks generates additional income from commercial activities such
as catering and staging public events such as concerts.
The
Royal Parks Foundation is
a registered charity which raises funds to protect, support and
create new opportunities within the Parks. They have a number of
membership schemes such as adoption and champion programmes.
Gallery
Image:Regent's Park London from 1833 Schmollinger map.jpg|Regent's
Park
c.1833Image:Hyde Park London from 1833 Schmollinger
map.jpg|Hyde Park and part of Kensington Gardens
c.1833Image:Green Park and St. James's Park London from
1833 Schmollinger map.jpg|Green Park and St. James's Park
c.1833
References
- Thurston, Hazel. Royal Parks For The People: London's
Ten. UK and USA: David and Charles. Vancouver: Douglas, David
and Charles. 1974. ISBN 0 7153 6454 5. Includes listing of the
Parks with black and white photographic plates.
See also
External links