Hyde Park is one of the most famous public parks in London and also the largest of the four royal parks. You can find out all about the park here.
Hyde Park is one of the most famous public parks in London. It is the largest of the four royal parks and stretches from Kensington to Buckingham Palace. That says a lot about its history.
The beginnings of Hyde Park go back to Henry the Eighth (Henry VIII and his numerous wives, to be precise), who made the area he had previously taken from the monks of Westminster Abbey his hunting ground as early as 1536. A good hundred years later, its doors were opened to the public by King Charles I and Hyde Park quickly became a popular place for outings and parades. In the early 18th century, Queen Caroline redesigned the park. Finally, in 1851, the park became the site of the Great Exhibition, for which Joseph Paxton built the famous Crystal Palace. Later, important demonstrations took place there and Speakers’ Corner established itself as a place of free speech. In the late 20th century, Hyde Park hosted legendary concerts, including Pink Floyd, the Rolling Stones and Queen.
Hyde Park is the largest of the royal parks in London. Green Park, St. James’ Park and the garden of Buckingham Palace border it to the southeast. To the west, Hyde Park merges with Kensington Gardens. The official separation of these two green spaces was made by Queen Caroline. However, the border is barely visible during the day. Only at night do the differences become apparent. While Kensington Gardens closes at dusk, Hyde Park remains open from five in the morning until midnight. In total, the duo covers 253 hectares in the middle of London, 142 hectares of which belong to Hyde Park.
Design of the park
Once the park was no longer just a private hunting ground, it was initially opened to the city’s upper classes. It was not until 1637 that Charles the First opened the park to the general public. Over time, the park took on various functions, from a military camp to a place for fortifications. The first landscaping of the park began in 1726, commissioned by King George I and later his daughter Caroline. In addition to the separation between Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens, the Serpentine Lake was created by damming the River Westbourne. This still characterizes the park today and divides it into two halves. It is also still an inviting place to swim.
The south-east of the park is dominated by a rose garden with fountains, memorials and the monumental triumphal Wellington Arch. One of the park’s newest structures is the Princess Diana Memorial Fountain, which is the size of a soccer pitch. At the north-eastern corner of the park is also the famous Speakers’ Corner, still a place and symbol of public freedom of speech today
Every year since 2000, between June and October, the “Serpentine Pavilion” has been open, a place for architectural experiments and projects by leading international architects. Each year, the pavilion is designed and built by different offices and architects. For example, the pavilion built in 2012 was designed by Herzog & de Meuron in collaboration with the Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei. Their pavilion leads visitors under the turf like an archaeological excavation and refers, among other things, to the eleven pavilions that previously stood here.
In 2017, Francis Kéré from Burkina Faso designed an open pavilion in Hyde Park, which was inspired by a tree that serves as a central meeting point for citizens in his home town of Gando. For 2021, Sumayya Vally from Johannisburg-based Counterspace designed a pavilion that is bursting with diversity and combines a wide range of ideas and principles.
Festivities
One of the biggest events in Hyde Park was the Great Exhibition of 1851, when the purpose-built Crystal Palace stood on the south side of the park. As the public did not want the building there after the exhibition, the architect bought it and rebuilt it in the south of London. The park was also the site of many royal jubilees and celebrations. For example, the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee was held there in 2012. Since 2007, the Winter Wonderland Festival has attracted numerous visitors to Hyde Park every year. It has since become the biggest Christmas attraction in Europe, attracting over 14 million visitors in 2016.
Concerts and sporting events
The concert stage in Hyde Park has hosted many high-profile artists. Concerts have been held there three times a week since 1890. Since the early 1970s, rock musicians such as Pink Floyd, Roy Harper and Jethro Tull have performed here. The Rolling Stones also gave a concert, which is one of the most famous concerts of the 1960s. Pink Floyd made history in 2005 when they gave the last concert of their career in Hyde Park.
Meanwhile, criticism of the events is growing among the park’s residents. They are campaigning for a maximum volume of 73 decibels. Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney even found their microphones switched off after ignoring the evening curfew.
The city park is not just a green lung and a paradise for walking and jogging. Various sports facilities, from football pitches to tennis courts, cycle paths and horse trails, invite Londoners to do just that. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, the triathlon and swimming events took place in open water in Hyde Park.
The first flowers moved to the Royal Gardens in 1860. The Italian Water Garden with fountains and a summer house followed a year later. A rose garden by Colvin and Moggridge Landscape Architects was added in 1994. In the late 20th century, there was a serious turning point: over 9,000 elm trees from Queen Caroline’s time died of a disease. They were replaced by lime and maple trees. Tree sponsorships were also established to support the care and maintenance of the trees.
Hyde Park also has four hectares of greenhouses in which the plants for the royal parks are grown. Nature conservation and species protection also play a major role in Hyde Park. Both are seen as an obligation to future generations. Various partners and volunteers contribute to this. As in all metropolitan areas, habitats and biodiversity are under increasing pressure. Increasingly extreme climate change, air pollution, diseases in animals and plants are just as problematic as the pressure of use due to growing numbers of visitors. A framework plan for biodiversity should now help to maintain a healthy, resilient and connected park for future generations.
Interested in another attractive recreational area in London? At King’s Cross station, the architects at Moxon have built the Esperance Bridge pedestrian bridge over Regent’s Canal. Find out more here.