- Burgess Park
Burgess Park is situated in the
London Borough of Southwark , in an area betweenCamberwell , Walworth andPeckham . At 46ha (113 acres), it is one of the largest parks in Southeast London. Unlike most other parks in London, Burgess Park was carved out of a highly built-up area of the city. Virtually all the land now occupied by the park was previously housing, industry and transport infrastructure. The idea for Burgess Park came out of the 1943 Abercrombie plan for open spaces in London, and the land has been gradually assembled and landscaped over the subsequent decades, first by theLondon County Council , then theGreater London Council , and since the mid-1980s, theLondon Borough of Southwark . An important stage in the construction of the park was the closure of theGrand Surrey Canal in the early 1970s, which terminated at Addington Wharf on Walworth Road. The Canal served theSurrey Commercial Docks , and the area near Camberwell was full of 19th century streets, houses and industrial buildings (including aginger beer factory), many of which had suffered heavy bomb damage during WWII. The stretch of canal now incorporated in the Park is the site of "Camberwell Wharf", which was virtually straight. Other land incorporated in the park was occupied by housing. While some of this housing was in very poor condition, a lot of perfectly serviceable homes were demolished to build the park, and this has resulted in very strong local feelings about the park.Named Burgess Park in 1973 (after Councillor Jessie Burgess, Camberwell's first woman Mayor), it is still not complete and contains some former roads which have been stopped up but not yet grassed over. The boundaries of Burgess Park remain a matter of dispute, and because the park has never been finished, it is regularly the subject of proposals to build housing, schools, or transport links of the sort that would never be contemplated in one of London's more traditional Victorian Parks.There are
listed building s in the Park, remnants of the streets which once occupied the site: alime kiln , the library, baths and wash houses and the formeralmshouse s in Chumleigh Gardens. There are also several bridges, which once use to cross the canal .Chumleigh Gardens, near the centre of the park, is a beautifully planted "World Garden", with plants and landscaping designed to reflect the diversity of the surrounding population of this highly cosmopolitan portion of London.
There is also a thriving "Friends of Burgess Park". The park also plays host every August to the
Carnaval Del Pueblo , Europe's largest celebration ofLatin American culture .External links
* [http://www.southwark.gov.uk/YourServices/ParksSection/AZParks/BurgessPark.html Facilities in Burgess Park]
* [http://www.gardenvisit.com/landscape/london/lguide/burgess-park-london.htm Burgess Park - landscape architecture]
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