Eastcote House Gardens
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Eastcote_House_Gardens an entity of type: Thing
Eastcote House Gardens is an area of public parkland in Eastcote, within the London Borough of Hillingdon. The site covers 3.63 hectares (9 acres) and incorporates the walled garden, dovecote and coach house of Eastcote House. The house was demolished in 1964 by the then Ruislip-Northwood Urban District Council (RNUDC), one of the predecessors of the London Borough of Hillingdon which was formed the following year. At the public's request, the garden and outbuildings were retained and are now maintained by a group of volunteers, the Friends of Eastcote House Gardens, in partnership with the local authority.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Eastcote House Gardens
rdf:langString
Eastcote House Gardens
rdf:langString
Eastcote House Gardens
xsd:float
51.58666610717773
xsd:float
-0.4022220075130463
xsd:integer
32175610
xsd:integer
1094828915
rdf:langString
The dovecote and herb beds
rdf:langString
England
rdf:langString
Greater London
xsd:string
51.586667 -0.402222
rdf:langString
Eastcote House Gardens is an area of public parkland in Eastcote, within the London Borough of Hillingdon. The site covers 3.63 hectares (9 acres) and incorporates the walled garden, dovecote and coach house of Eastcote House. The house was demolished in 1964 by the then Ruislip-Northwood Urban District Council (RNUDC), one of the predecessors of the London Borough of Hillingdon which was formed the following year. At the public's request, the garden and outbuildings were retained and are now maintained by a group of volunteers, the Friends of Eastcote House Gardens, in partnership with the local authority. Eastcote House was one of three largest in Eastcote, together with Highgrove House and Haydon Hall. All came to be owned by the RNUDC, but only Highgrove House remains in its original form; Haydon Hall was demolished in 1967 by the RNUDC's successor. The coach house, dovecote, and garden walls received Grade II listed status on 6 September 1974. Ecological surveys have found fifty types of trees in the gardens, and numerous species of birds, mammals and insects have been recorded. The gardens received the Green Flag Award in September 2011 following an earlier inspection.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
12366
<Geometry>
POINT(-0.40222200751305 51.586666107178)