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Landscaped pathways along the east end of Southwark Park. Southwark Park is located in Rotherhithe, in central South East London, England, and is managed by the London Borough of Southwark. It first opened in 1869 by the Metropolitan Board of Works as one of its first parks. It was designed by Alexander McKenzie and covers 63 acres (250,000 m 2 ...
Diamond's photographs have been shown in the Hayward Gallery, Photographer's Gallery, Battersea Arts Centre, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Michael Parkin Fine Art, Cafe Gallery Southwark (now Southwark Park Galleries), National Portrait Gallery, Sudley House, The Space, Victoria and Albert Museum, Whitechapel Art Gallery and elsewhere.
2010 Throwing Shapes, Wall Painting, CPG Café Gallery Southwark Park 2008 Vertigo in Three Parts, Wall Painting, Sadler's Wells Theatre, London 2012 Studio 1.1 Gallery. 30 Day OlympiAINT
A large water feature and paddling pool, named Elephant Springs, is located in the north eastern quarter of the park. [31] In 2022, a timber pavilion, called The Tree House, and designed architect studio Bell Phillips, opened. The structure is triangular and is built around a tree. It includes public toilets, a cafe, and a viewing gallery on ...
Peckham Rye Park and Common with Piermont Green: 42.75 hectares (105.6 acres) [14] The park is Edwardian. Potters Fields Park: 1.36 hectares (3.4 acres) [15] Russia Dock Woodland: 14.0 hectares (35 acres) Southwark Park: 26.57 hectares (65.7 acres) [16] opened 1869, one of the earliest opened by the Metropolitan Board of Works: gardens, sports ...
Dulwich Picture Gallery: 2009: Peter Randall-Page — Sculpture — Presented by the Art Fund in 2011 to mark the Dulwich Picture Gallery's bicentenary. [34] [35] Three Perpetual Chords: Dulwich Park: 2015: Conrad Shawcross — Sculpture — [36]
Tabard Gardens is a small park in Southwark, London. It is located on Tabard Street [9] (itself named after the former Tabard public house) and gives its name to the surrounding Tabard Gardens Estate. [10] The park was created as part of a slum clearance programme by the London County Council [11] and opened in 1929. [4]
Dulwich Park is a 30.85-hectare (76.2-acre) public park [1] in Dulwich in the London Borough of Southwark, south London, England. [2] The park was created by the Metropolitan Board of Works from former farmland and meadows.