Park in Perth, Western Australia
Hyde Park (formerly Third Swamp Reserve) is an inner-city park in Perth, the state capital of Western Australia. It is located in the northeast corner of the suburb of Perth – 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) north of the central business district – surrounded by Vincent, William, Glendower and Throssell Streets.[a]
Facilities include: public toilets, playground equipment, barbecues, drinking fountains, pavilion, stage area, fitness equipment[1] and a sealed walking path around 800 metres (2,600 ft) long ringing the lake. Electricity is available, which is used, for example, to power temporary fairground rides.[citation needed]
Hyde Park is in the City of Vincent.[2] It has a lake feature in the middle which is separated into two basins.[2] The park is popular with people walking around, weddings, picnics and barbeques.[2] The park has 17 zones that are available to hire for events.[2]
The Hyde Park Fair[3] is held annually in the park, and is one of Perth's longest running free community events.[4] The event was originally known as the Hyde Park Festival, and was first held in 1968.[5][6] The Festival ended in 1985,[5] but was resurrected in 1988[7] as the Hyde Park Fair, run by the Rotary Club of North Perth.[8]
Hyde Park Hyde Park, 1925Prior to European settlement, the area was known to the local Noongar people as Boodjamooling. Originally the area was approximately midway along a series of wetlands that stretched from Claisebrook Cove through to Herdsman Lake and included Galup. The lakes and the area in which they resided were collectively known as the Great Lakes District. Today, only a small proportion of those wetlands remain.
After the establishment of the Swan River Colony in 1829, the European settlers gave it the name Third Swamp. In 1897, 15.5 hectares (38 acres) of Third Swamp was gazetted as a public park by Lyall Hall and two years later renamed Hyde Park.[9]
Hyde Park Lakes Restoration Project[edit] The lake in 2023During the late 1980s, a significant level of public concern began to develop on various fronts relating mainly to the environmental health of the lakes, along with the reduction in aesthetics and negative effects to the local flora and fauna.[10]
The lakes act as a stormwater compensation basin and have been naturally recharged via groundwater seepage and stormwater run-off. The lakes were adversely affected by a changing weather pattern, hotter summers and low rainfall turning them into a sludgy swamp during the summer. This in conjunction with the pressure on scarce and finite water resources meant that a long-term viable engineered solution was required to maintain a water body year round.
After thorough investigation, a master plan was developed and the Hyde Park Lakes Restoration Project was completed in June 2012.[citation needed] The works help ensure the lakes provide a pristine environment year round with the addition of endemic plant species thereby providing a better habitat for the wildlife.[citation needed]
The existing lake wall was repaired and retained and a new lower lake wall was constructed to reduce the lakes' overall surface area by approximately 15%, designed to reduce recharge volumes and allow for better management.[citation needed] Vegetated "beach" areas were constructed (one at the causeway corner of each lake) and planted with native vegetation to assist in removing nutrients from the lake water and to address the once stagnant areas of the lakes where rubbish accumulated.
Polyphagous shot-hole borer infestation[edit]In 2025, Hyde Park was significantly impacted by an infestation of the polyphagous shot-hole borer, an invasive beetle first detected in Western Australia in 2021.[11] On 19 May 2025, the City of Vincent launched a six-week program to remove approximately 300 heavily infested trees and shrubs from the park’s two lake islands and surrounding areas, in an effort to prevent the spread of the beetle to other parts of the park, including historic Moreton Bay fig and London plane trees.[12] A rehabilitation program is planned to replant[when?] over 4,000 native and borer-resilient trees and shrubs.
Sloping grass areas run down to two central groundwater lakes. Shade is provided by mature introduced trees:
There are about 300 southwestern snake-necked turtles living in the park.[14]
Several iconic plantings have occurred in Hyde Park over the years, including the avenue of London plane trees surrounding the lakes that were planted between 1897 and 1899, and the grove of jacarandas in the south east corner of the park in 1921.[10] More recent times have seen the establishment of two native garden beds on the northern side of the park around a stand of original jarrah trees.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4