Beach House Park, Worthing

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TypePublic gardens
LocationWorthing, West Sussex, England
Coordinates50°48′49″N 0°21′48″W / 50.8136°N 0.3633°W / 50.8136; -0.3633
Area9.57 acres (3.87 ha)
Beach House Park
A sunlit park in winter.  Behind two bare trees, two benches and lawn in the foreground, a circular path surrounds a slightly sunken area of shrubs with a mound in the centre.  Another path leads off diagonally in the left background.  In the distance, there is a slim, tall chimney and a large white house with a wide chimneypot.
Looking southwest towards the war pigeon memorial, with Beach House in the background
TypePublic gardens
LocationWorthing, West Sussex, England
Coordinates50°48′49″N 0°21′48″W / 50.8136°N 0.3633°W / 50.8136; -0.3633
Area9.57 acres (3.87 ha)
Created1924 (1924)
Operated byWorthing Borough Council
OpenAll year
The north side of the park has bowling greens and pavilions.

Beach House Park is a formal garden in Worthing, a town and local government district in West Sussex, England. Opened by Worthing Borough Council in 1924, the 9.57-acre (3.87 ha) park has formal lawns and flowerbeds, bowling greens of international standard, and a war memorial commemorating war pigeons. A café in the grounds was destroyed by fire in 2009.

Beach House, a Grade II*-listed Regency-style villa, was built in about 1820 by John Rebecca.[1] It faced the beach on the English Channel coast, and its grounds extended northwards as far as the east–west Lyndhurst Road. In December 1922, Worthing Borough Council bought a section of these grounds (covering 9.57 acres (3.87 ha) between Brighton Road to the south and Lyndhurst Road to the north) for the benefit of the public. Formal gardens were laid out, and the park opened in early 1924.[2][3]

The south (Brighton Road) end of the park is planted with shrubs, flowers and trees, while the northern section is given over to bowling greens, tennis courts and associated buildings. Trees run down the eastern and western boundaries, and surround the war pigeon memorial in the centre. The London Plane tree (Platanus × hispanica) is the predominant species; many were planted in 1992. There are also Cappadocian Maples (Acer cappadocicum).[2] A herbaceous border runs along the north side of the formal gardens, separating them from the bowling greens. Formal flowerbeds line the pathways in the ornamental gardens and the central pathway from there through the bowling greens.[2]

The park originally had two bowling greens. More were laid out in 1926, 1934 and 1967.[4] Three tennis courts, toilets, a park attendant's office, changing rooms and extra-large outdoor chessboards are also available.[2]

For many years, there was a café in the park. In July 2009, it was severely damaged in an arson attack,[5] but reopened—only to be destroyed by another fire three months later.[6]

Bowls

Pigeon memorial

References

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