3041Attractions
The Holburne Museum
4.3/516 Reviews
<100m away
Great Pulteney Street
4.7/56 Reviews
454m away
Pulteney Bridge
4.6/582 Reviews
673m away
The picture is not very big, but the trees inside are very detailed. The sanitation workers should have trimmed them very carefully, giving people a delicate feeling, and there are many places for tourists to rest.
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The picture is not very big, but the trees inside are very detailed. The sanitation workers should have trimmed them very carefully, giving people a delicate feeling, and there are many places for tourists to rest.
The Sydney Garden is also a very interesting place. The garden area is also quite large. There are many interesting things and many plants and flowers have been planted here. The garden also has quite a lot of content.
The Sydney Garden is a beautiful garden close to nature. The vegetation here is very lush. Every summer and autumn, the flowers here are in full bloom with distinct colors. There are four or five colors such as pink, light yellow, green and deep purple, which are very beautiful. , It is very worthy of everyone.
Sydney Garden is a Georgian garden at the end of the eighteenth century. There is now a railway passing through the garden. There is also a canal to walk along the banks of the Kenner River and Affin River. Along the way, we visited the green park and the local market. There are many concentric locks and some interesting barges.
Sydney Gardens is the oldest park in Bath, designed and built in 1795. From the end of the 18th century to the 19th century, it was a very fashionable amusement park, often visited by royal family members. The old trees and green grass in the current park are the main scenery, and the environment is very beautiful. The park is on the way from Bath High Street to the Royal Crescent, which is very worth going in.
The city of Bath is surrounded by mountains and rivers. The River Avon, which flows through Shakespeare’s hometown, also passes through the city. Avon means river in Welsh. We walked out of the train station and headed towards the towering spire of Bath Cathedral. When passing by the Parade Garden, a quaint three-arcade bridge attracted my attention. The three arc-shaped stairs in the south of the bridge make the gurgling river fall into a three-step arc-shaped waterfall, and the scattered silver and white water practice contrasts with the ancient bridge. Go east across the covered bridge to Sydney Gardens, where there is the former residence of the famous British female writer Jane Austin.