Where is stourhead
The villa offers excellent viewing angles of the surrounding gardens and woodlands and is a checkpoint for tourists who visit the grounds.
The gardens are adorned by some of the freshest aromas from the flowers of trees and other plants. The garden vegetation is also magnificent to behold, diversified with flowers of blue, purple, yellow, and red among others. The three temples are a tower in the city within the gardens. The Palladium villa is the greatest captivator for visitors, besides the three temples, and the flower gardens surrounding the mansion.
The Pantheon is reportedly the most famous feature among the gardens. About , visitors flood the tourism magnet each year to catch a glimpse of life in the seventeenth century. Stourhead has been under the care of the National Trust since You do not need to book to visit the wider estate. The house at Stourhead is open daily from from 11am - 3pm. Visits are limited and entry to the house is not guaranteed on the day you visit. Find out about visiting the house and its history.
There is always lots going on at Stourhead to help you spend time together as a family. Find out about visiting with your dog, and discover some of the walking routes around the garden and wider estate. We have plenty of options for a spot of retail therapy at Stourhead. Our restaurant and outdoor kiosk are now open daily. The restaurant has reverted to a pre-covid seating layout.
We will continue to maintain high standards of cleanliness and till and collection points will be screened. Hand sanitiser will be available should visitors wish to use it. Thank you for making this a safe experience for everyone. This 18th-century cottage at the heart of Stourhead offers the perfect holiday getaway. This pretty stone cottage is set at the entrance to the garden.
Sleeping seven it allows guests to enjoy the dazzling displays before visitors arrive. Situated a few yards from the entrance to the world famous gardens at Stourhead, this pretty cottage is privately run, sleeps eight and is available to let on a self-catering basis.
This is a great way to get outdoors and enjoy Stourhead. In we are marking 75 years of looking after Stourhead which was gifted to the National Trust by the Hoare family on 7 March We are working with Creativity Works to deliver a community-led, mass participation arts project to celebrate all the things we cherish the most about the green spaces, like Stourhead, that have been there for us during this extraordinary time.
Find out how you can get involved. The Pantheon was recently in need of repair. Find out why this building is so important to the landscape and history of Stourhead, and why is must always be preserved. Stourhead House is cutting bills and carbon emissions with a cutting edge, greener biomass heating system. The Axminster carpet in the Saloon is the oldest, largest and most important at Stourhead. Weighing stone, the carpet was sent for conservation work which took nine months to complete.
Find out more about what was involved. A new book — Treasures from the Collections of the National Trust — shares the stories behind some remarkable objects and takes readers on a journey through time, starting with Roman sculpture and ending with 20th-century design. Stourhead is home to three of these treasures, including the Pope's Cabinet.
Find out what makes it so special. Explore the objects and works of art we care for at Stourhead on the National Trust Collections website. The world-famous landscape garden has at its centrepiece a magnificent lake reflecting classical temples, mystical grottoes, and rare and exotic trees, and offers a day of fresh air and discovery.
Explore the 1, hectare 2, acre Stourhead estate where chalk downs, ancient woods and farmland are managed for wildlife. If the place runs Gift Aid on Entry, we'll offer you a clear choice between the Gift Aid Admission prices and the Standard Admission prices at the admission point.
It's entirely up to you which ticket you choose. Gift Aid Admission includes a 10 per cent or more voluntary donation.
Gift Aid Admissions let us reclaim tax on the whole amount paid - an extra 25 per cent - potentially a very significant boost to our places' funds. The path continues down to the lakeside and then turns in a north-westerly direction on the eastern shore of the lake, running parallel to the formal Fir Walk situated above it to its east, with at its far north-west end The Obelisk listed grade I. At the northern tip of the lake, at Six Wells Bottom, the path turns to continue along the west side of the lake.
Further along the walk stands the C18 Gothic Cottage listed grade I from where there is a fine view of the late C18 Palladian Bridge listed grade I crossing the far eastern tip of the lake.
The path continues southwards from the Gothic Cottage and passes the Pantheon listed grade I designed by Henry Flitcroft in the mid C Beyond the Pantheon the path continues over the Iron Bridge listed grade II of , which replaces an earlier bridge of c , crossing the south-west tip of the lake.
The path then runs along the south side of the lake, passing the smaller Turner's Paddock Lane to its south-west. The path then leads to the far eastern tip of the lake where the medieval Bristol High Cross listed grade I , introduced into the garden in the late C18, stands.
Beyond this lies the village and church of Stourton, which were seen as important features within the designed landscape from the s Batey and Lambert The main circuit walk ends on the south-east side of the lake at the mid C18 Temple of Flora Henry Flitcroft, listed grade I , with c 70m to its north a late C18 boathouse listed grade II on the lakeside.
There are very fine surprise views between the key garden buildings, including the village and church. The main park at Stourhead dates from the late C18 and surrounds the House to the north, east, and west. It is edged by a thin belt of mature trees to the north and east, with a thicker plantation called Sand Walk to the south-west. The park contains a scattering of mature single trees and small clumps.
To the north-west the park is linked to a ride called The Terrace, which runs along the north-east boundary, and is screened to its south-west by Sunny Hanging, a mature belt of trees with Six Wells Bottom beyond it. The Terrace ride runs for c 1. This triangular tower, introduced in the late C18 and designed by Henry Flitcroft, stands at the far north-west tip of the site, on Kingsettle Hill.
It was built on the spot where King Alfred raised his standard after emerging from hiding on the Isle of Athelney, and it commemorates the accession of George III in and the end of the Seven Years War in From the tower are spectacular views of the park and the surrounding countryside. The latter woodland is named after The Convent listed grade I , situated c 1.
This is a rustic folly in Gothic style introduced in by Henry Hoare II to adorn one of the various rides he created in the woodland. During the C20 it was significantly altered and converted to a cottage and has since been in use as a private dwelling.
Note: there is a wealth of published material about this site. The key references are listed below. Country Life, 9 6 April , pp ; 57 18 April , pp ; 83 11 June , pp ; no 24 8 June , pp The conservation of the garden at Stourhead and parts of the park relating to it, National Trust There was a park at Stourton during the 15th and 16th centuries.
Henry Hoare replaced the previous house with a Palladian-style country house designed by Colen Campbell in about
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