Hyde Park
Hyde Park is London's largest central park, a 350-acre green rectangle that feels surprisingly wild despite being surrounded by traffic.
About Hyde Park
Hyde Park is London's largest central park, a 350-acre green rectangle that feels surprisingly wild despite being surrounded by traffic. The Serpentine lake cuts through the middle, creating two distinct halves - the busier eastern side near Speaker's Corner and Marble Arch, and the quieter western end that backs up to Kensington Palace. The Diana Memorial Fountain sits in the southwest corner, designed as a flowing oval of Cornish granite that children love to splash in during summer.
Walking here feels like moving through different worlds - from the formal Rose Garden near Hyde Park Corner to the wilder areas around the Serpentine where herons fish undisturbed. The paths are wide and well-maintained, perfect for cycling or jogging, while the grass areas fill with picnickers and sunbathers whenever the sun appears. Speaker's Corner on Sunday mornings still draws passionate orators on soapboxes, though the crowds are smaller than they once were.
The park works best when you're not trying to see everything - it's massive and you'll exhaust yourself walking corner to corner. The Diana Memorial gets overcrowded on warm days, and Hyde Park Corner is permanently noisy from traffic. Focus on either the lake area for a proper nature break, or the western edge near Kensington Gardens if you want the palace views. Winter Wonderland (November-January) completely transforms the park but brings enormous crowds.
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