Web: wwt.org.uk/London
Open from 9.30am, every day except 25 December.
Check website for closing times. Admission without
gift aid Adult £15.40, Junior (4-17 years) £ 10.00,
Concessions £13.90, Family £43.10 (2 adults & 2
children)
Free entry for WWT members. Children under 4 yrs
and carers accompanying visitors with disabilities
Nearest Station: Barnes, Barnes Bridge and
Hammersmith
Accessibility: There's free parking, and the
majority of our paths are level or gently undulating.
Wheelchairs and mobility scooters are available.
Please book in advance to reserve one.
Old Deer Park
Tel: 020 8891 1141
E: parks@richmond.gov.uk
Web: richmond.gov.uk/parks_and_open_spaces
Open all year
Bus: 33, 65, 190, 371, 490, 493, H22, R68, R70
Formerly part of a hunting park attached to
Richmond Palace, it plays host to various sports
and events throughout the year. Facilities include
two playgrounds, tennis courts, outdoor gym, sports
pitches and indoor and outdoor swimming pools.
Home Park
Hampton Court Palace
Park open all year
Tel: 020 133 6000
E: hamptoncourt@hrp.org.uk
Bus: 111, 216, 411, 461, R68
Extending from the sumptuous
grounds of Hampton Court
Palace and hugging a bend in
the River Thames, this royal deer
park is a Site of Special Scientific Interest for nature
conversation and is home to the Long Water Canal,
Hampton Court Palace Golf Club and a herd of 300
fallow deer.
Crane Park
Entrance off Ellman Avenue or Great Chertsey Rd
Tel: 020 8755 2339
Open all year.
Bus: 110, H22
Crane Park follows the bends of the River Crane
from Twickenham to the Hanworth Road, Whitton.
The tranquil nature of the reserve is a haven for
wildlife including marsh frogs and rare water voles.
There is a cycle track, the remains of a gunpowder
mill and a Sot Tower blended with riverside
meadows and wooded riverbanks.
Terrace Gardens and Richmond
Hill view point
Petersham Road/Richmond Hill, Richmond
Tel: 0845 6122 2660
Email: parks@richmond.gov.uk
Web: richmond.gov.uk/parks_and_open_spaces
Open all year
Bus: 65, 371
The Terrace Gardens are famous for their
seasonal bedding, shrubberies, rockery and
rose garden, all set amongst fine trees
and sloping lawns. Features of the
garden history remain, including the
statue of the River God and an ice
house set in the slope to the read of
the thatched summer house. From the
gravel wall at the summit of Richmond
Hill many landmarks can be viewed,
and on a clear day you can see as far as
Windsor castle.
Asian short-clawed otter eating a
fish at WWT London Wetland Centre
that Richmond
Park was
established by King
Charles I in 1637
Did you knowvisitrichmond.co.uk - 11 ---