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  1. Celebrating the completion of Greenwich Park Revealed. Greenwich Park Revealed has protected our past, improved natural habitats so nature can thrive today, and future-proofed visitor facilities for a growing local population.

  2. Greenwich Park has an extensive main car park located along either side of Blackheath Avenue at the southern end of the park. It is accessible from Charlton Way as shown on our park map . Vehicle parking is available from 7:00am to park closing times, as shown on the park web page .

  3. Welcome to Greenwich Park, one of London’s eight Royal Parks; a mix of 17th-century landscape, stunning gardens and a history dating back to Roman times.

  4. Things to see and do in Greenwich Park. Stand at the centre of world time. Sit in the shade of a sweet chestnut tree from 1660. Stroll the length of London’s longest herbaceous border. There’s no rush. Take time to discover Greenwich Park.

  5. The landscape restoration will expand valuable acid grassland habitats found in the park, providing foraging habitat for pollinators and birds, with specific opportunities incorporated for ground nesting bees and wasps. Works will begin winter 2022 to be completed March 2025.

  6. The Greenwich Park Mobility Buggy is back for 2024. The free service is scheduled to run on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, from 11.30am to 4.30pm, taking people up and down the park’s famously steep hill.

  7. Greenwich Park has three fantastic spots for you to eat and drink – with stunning views across the River Thames and East London. The distinctive and elegant Pavilion Café, up by the Royal Observatory, dates from 1906 and has a lovely period feel.

  8. The Flower Garden, the Rose Garden and a record-breaking herbaceous border. Greenwich Park is paradise for garden lovers, with a magnificent landscape of trees, wildernesses and formal gardens created by some of the leading garden designers of the past three centuries.

  9. Greenwich Park’s Royal Observatory is one part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The 1800s – Greenwich Park was opened to the public. Greenwich Park's royal star began to wane in the 1700s and James II was the last monarch to actually live at the Palace.

  10. The Royal Parks honours the remarkable writer, composer and abolitionist Ignatius Sancho, as a new café opens in Greenwich Park. The Royal Parks charity is excited to welcome all park visitors to the brand-new Ignatius Sancho Café in Vanbrugh Yard - a newly created public space in the southeast corner of the park.