Princes Park (Liverpool)
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Princes Park was the idea of Richard Vaughan Yates and the first public park to be designed by Joseph Paxton. The park was a private venture financed by the sale of building plots for the grand villas around the park's periphery. The serpentine lake was formed by damming Dickinson’s Dingle, its contours giving the impression of a long, winding river and many of the villas overlooked this tranquil scene. It was also the site of the ornamental Swiss boathouse, rockeries and the Chinese bridge which are all long gone. The park opened in 1842 but was not finished until 1845, public access was limited to certain areas until the last century.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 53°23'13"N 2°57'13"W
- Sefton Park 0.6 km
- Garden Festival Site 1.5 km
- Croxteth Country Park 7.5 km
- Arrowe Park 10 km
- Rimrose Valley Country Park 12 km
- Thurstaston Common 13 km
- Lunt Meadows 15 km
- Reach Golf Club 49 km
- Wyre-Lune Sanctuary 66 km
- Birkrigg Common 87 km
- Liverpool Marina 2 km
- University of Liverpool 2.1 km
- Baltic Triangle 2.2 km
- Royal Liverpool University Hospital 2.6 km
- Royal Liverpool University Hospital 2.6 km
- Liverpool One 2.8 km
- Kensington and Fairfield 3.1 km
- Queensway Tunnel (1934) 3.6 km
- Wirral Peninsula 8 km
- Merseyside 10 km