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Hyde Park Gate is a street in Central London, England, which applies to two parallel roads in Kensington on the southern boundary of Kensington Gardens These two roads run south, perpendicular to Kensington Road , but the name Hyde Park Gate also applies to the houses on the south side of that road between Queen's Gate and De Vere Gardens .
Hyde Park is a 350-acre (140 ha), historic Grade I-listed urban park in Westminster, Greater London.A Royal Park, it is the largest of the parks and green spaces that form a chain from Kensington Palace through Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park, via Hyde Park Corner and Green Park, past Buckingham Palace to St James's Park.
The renovation of Hyde Park, Green Park, and St James's Park, began, in 1825, with the demarcation of new drives and pathways, subsequent to which Burton designed new lodges and gates, viz. Cumberland Gate, Stanhope Gate, Grosvenor Gate, the Hyde Park Gate/Screen at Hyde Park Corner, and, later, the Prince of Wales's Gate, Knightsbridge, in the ...
Marble Arch (left) before its relocation to Hyde Park in 1847. It was constructed in 1832–1833, as the ceremonial entrance to the newly rebuilt Buckingham Palace courtyard. Buckingham Palace remained unoccupied, and for the most part unfinished, until it was hurriedly completed upon the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837. Within a few years ...
Queen Elizabeth Gate, Hyde Park, by Giusseppe Lund Queen Elizabeth Gates - geograph.org.uk - 908215 Queen Elizabeth Gate, 2005. Queen Elizabeth Gate, also known as the Queen Mother's Gate, is an entrance consisting of two pairs and two single gates of forged stainless steel and bronze situated in Hyde Park, London, behind Apsley House at Hyde Park Corner.
Though Hyde Park Speakers' Corner is considered the paved area closest to Marble Arch, [3] legally the public speaking area extends beyond the Reform Tree and covers a large area from Marble Arch to Victoria Gate, then along the Serpentine to Hyde Park Corner and the Broad Walk running from Hyde Park Corner to Marble Arch. [4]
Holland Park W8 7NA 2001 () 178 : Sir Winston Churchill O. M. (1874–1965) "Prime Minister lived and died here" 28 Hyde Park Gate Kensington SW7 5DJ 1985 () 138 : Muzio Clementi (1752–1832) "COMPOSER lived here" 128 Kensington Church Street Kensington W8 4BH 1963 () 631 : Wells Coates (1895–1958) "Architect and Designer lived here 1936–1956"
Hyde Park Gardens Mews is a mews street in the Tyburnia area of London, W2. The mews consists of 46 residential properties, originally built as stables for Hyde Park Gardens , on a cobbled road with two entrances.