Everton Park, Liverpool

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Everton_Park,_Liverpool an entity of type: Thing

Everton Park, located in Everton, Liverpool, England, is a modern park, covering over 40 hectares (0.40 km2), created between 1984 and 1989, as part of a major house clearance programme, on Everton Hill between Great Homer Street and Everton Road/Heyworth Street. The park is Liverpool City Council owned. The park features the Everton Park Nature Garden, a walled community garden with three ponds, bridges, paths, overhanging trees, a wildflower field, raised flower beds with seating, and colourful wild birds. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Everton Park, Liverpool
rdf:langString Everton Park
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xsd:integer 15793885
xsd:integer 1036143202
rdf:langString Everton, Liverpool, England
rdf:langString Liverpool from Everton Park - geograph.org.uk - 208708.jpg
rdf:langString Everton Park with Liverpool City Centre in the background
rdf:langString Open all year round
rdf:langString Public park
xsd:string 53.42 -2.972
rdf:langString Everton Park, located in Everton, Liverpool, England, is a modern park, covering over 40 hectares (0.40 km2), created between 1984 and 1989, as part of a major house clearance programme, on Everton Hill between Great Homer Street and Everton Road/Heyworth Street. The park is Liverpool City Council owned. The park features the Everton Park Nature Garden, a walled community garden with three ponds, bridges, paths, overhanging trees, a wildflower field, raised flower beds with seating, and colourful wild birds. Prince Rupert's Tower (a Georgian village lock-up), and St George's Church are also located within Everton Park. The park is split into loosely defined sections (according to Ordnance Survey), such as Whitley Gardens, Brow Side Gardens, Everton Nature Garden, and the Rupert Lane Recreation Ground, the latter tracing its heritage to a former building known as Rupert House, commemorating the royal visit of Prince Rupert in 1644, during the siege of Liverpool in the English Civil War. The former building (still standing by 1830) was built upon and converted into a militia barracks, then subsequently converted into a recreation ground by 1930, then was integrated with the rest of what would be called Everton Park in the early 1980s.
xsd:integer 1984
xsd:integer 300
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5871
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