Saltwell Park

Saltwell Park is a Victorian park in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, England. Opened in 1876, the park was designed by Edward Kemp and incorporates the mansion and associated grounds of the Saltwellgate estate owner, William Wailes, who sold his estate to Gateshead Council for £35,000. Upon opening, it became known as "The People's Park". The park was expanded in 1920 when the council purchased the adjacent gardens to the Saltwell Grove estate and added these to the park. This extended the park's total size to 55 acres (22 ha). The park had fallen into disrepair, but between 1999 and 2005, it was subject to a £9.6 million restoration project, funded collaboratively by the Heritage Lottery Fund and Gateshead Council, and is now considered "one of Britain's finest examples of a Victorian park". In 2011, the park hosted around two million visitors.

The park is split broadly into three sections. Saltwell Grove, the northern section, is an area of grassed open space with a bandstand to the western corner. The central area contains the centrepiece of the park – Wailes's former home, the Grade II listed Saltwell Towers and its surrounding belvedere walls. These have been fully restored and are now a visitor centre. There are also three war memorials, a yew-tree maze, a dene and an area containing several species of caged animals known as Pet's Corner. The largest section of the park is the Northern Fields section which contains a four-acre boating lake with a wooded island at its centre, as well as three bowling greens and two pavilions.

Saltwell Park has been presented with numerous awards in recent years. In 2005 it was named Britain's Best Park. In 2006 the park was named Civic Trust Park of the Year and won a Gold Laurel Award from the Institute of Maintenance and Building Management. The park has won a Green Flag award every year since 2006 and is (in 2012) one of fifty Green Heritage sites in the UK.

Read more about Saltwell Park:  Conception and Opening, Design and Layout, Principal Attractions, Park Use

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