top of page

Hyde Park

Visit the unmistakable Hyde Park, the largest of the British capital's royal parks, created by Henry VIII himself.

Click on the tag to see more
CITY
CATEGORY
Image by Bookblock

Plan your visit

icono de boletos

Ticket prices

Free.

icono de regalo

Free entrance

Admission to this park is free of charge.

icono de calendario

Opening hours

Every day from 5.00 a.m. to midnight, all year round.

icono de audioguia

Audio guide

This park does not have an audio guide.

icono de consigna

Cloakroom

This park does not have a cloakroom service.

icono de silla de ruedas

Accessibility

Accessible ramps at all entrances. Possibility of parking at different points, check timetables and current rates here.

icono de mapa

Address

45 Kensington Rd., South Kensington, London SW7 2AW, Reino Unido

For more information, visit the official site
Moderno Edificio blanco

What to see in Hyde Park?

When you visit, look for the following:

icono lupa
  1. The Serpentine

  2. Princess Diana Memorial Fountain

  3. Kensington Palace

  4. Speaker's Corner

  5. Albert Memorial

  6. Circular Pond

  7. Italian Gardens

  8. Peter Pan Statue

  9. Princess Diana Memorial Garden

  10. Monument to the Animals in Wars

  11. Reformer's Tree

  12. Diana the Huntress Fountain

  13. Hyde Park Rose Garden

  14. Queen Caroline's Temple

  15. Statue of Achilles

Photo gallery

pila de libros

Why should it be part of your tour?

The iconic Hyde Park is one of London's eight Royal Parks, with a total area of 142 hectares. This large expanse of wooded land in the west of London's historic city centre was first owned by the monks of Westminster, until Henry VIII confiscated it and transformed it into a royal hunting ground.

Subsequent British dynasties also continued to shape the park and its various sections. It was also used for public ceremonies and even for fighting during the English civil wars.

After the Glorious Revolution, Kings William and Mary added Kensington Palace and created a processional route through Hyde Park to Parliament at Westminster. But this is not to say that the public had little access to it: many Londoners camped in the park to protect themselves from the Great Fire of London in 1666; and the people also took part in great celebrations for the British victory at the famous naval battle of Trafalgar.

Few people know that most of the landscaping you will see in Hyde Park was designed by a woman, Queen Caroline - the wife of George II. Her greatest innovation was to create the watercourse that runs through the park, 'the Serpentine', by harnessing water from the Westbourne Brook beneath the park. Instead of the traditional straight, uniform ponds, Caroline opted for a more irregular, more natural silhouette.

In 1851, Hyde Park was the busiest place in the world, hosting the Great Exhibition and its famous Crystal Palace. More than six million visitors came from far and wide to see the British Empire's fair of innovations.

Over the last century, Hyde Park has become a recurring venue for outdoor walks and sporting activities for the people of the British capital. The most recent changes were in 2004 with the memorial to Princess Diana and the new, more accessible and sustainable designs that were implemented in the park.

As you can see, Hyde Park is part of the history of the city and the UK; it truly holds a special place in the hearts of Londoners. It is as essential a visit as it is beautiful any time of year you visit London.

Fondo-cafe-viaja-con-apina-kofi.jpg

Was this content useful to you?

🐝 All the content that we create about tourist sites we offer it for free. For all those travelers who, like us, enjoy going abroad and want to know more about what they are seeing.

 

☕ Therefore, every support that we receive through these little coffees will be very grateful and destined 100% to the maintenance and improvement of this website.

cafe con leche en taza amarilla

Buy us

a coffee?

bottom of page