Royal Victoria Park
Park & Garden
About Royal Victoria Park
Royal Victoria Park spreads across 57 acres right below the Royal Crescent, making it Bath's largest green space and your best bet for a proper outdoor break from all that Georgian architecture. The botanical garden section showcases labeled collections of rare trees and shrubs, while the rest of the park offers open lawns, a Victorian bandstand that hosts summer concerts, and one of Bath's better children's play areas. You'll find tennis courts, a skate park, and plenty of benches with views back up to the Royal Crescent.
The park feels like two different places depending on where you enter. Come through the main Marlborough Lane entrance and you'll start in the formal botanical garden with winding paths between specimen trees and educational plaques. Walk up from the Royal Crescent side and you hit the wide open lawns where families picnic and kids kick footballs around. The Victorian bandstand sits roughly in the middle, and on summer weekends you'll often hear live music drifting across the grass. The whole place has a relaxed, local feel that's quite different from Bath's more tourist heavy spots.
Most visitors only see the lawn area near the Royal Crescent and miss the botanical garden entirely, which is backwards since that's where the interesting plants are. The park is completely free, unlike many of Bath's attractions, and the play area is genuinely good if you've got kids in tow. Skip the tennis courts unless you're actually playing, they're nothing special, but do check the bandstand schedule if you're here in summer.
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