Palm House This is a
Grade II* three-tier dome conservatory
palm house designed and built by MacKenzie and Moncur of
Edinburgh which opened in 1896. In June 1992, a public meeting was held highlighting the dereliction and calling for restoration. A petition was presented to the City Council by what had become the "Save the Palm House" campaign. A public fund raising campaign was established, with a "sponsor a pane" programme generating over £35,000. This led directly to the conversion of Save the Palm House into a registered charity (Friends of Sefton Park Palm House). Among the supporters of the project were Liverpool jazz singer
George Melly and actress
Margi Clarke; Melly described it as "the magical palace of my childhood" and "a fairy castle". The Palm House was partially repaired and reopened in 1993. It was fully restored at a cost of £3.5 million with Heritage Lottery and European funding and reopened in September 2001. It is now both a popular visitor attraction offering free and paid-for public entertainment and is venue for hire. replacing the original which was residing in Liverpool's Conservation Centre before the centre closed to the public.
Obelisk . The principal entrance to the Park, opposite Lodge Lane, is the location of the
Samuel Smith memorial. This is in the form of a tall granite
obelisk, which stands at the head of an avenue leading to the park’s central plaza, where the Shaftesbury fountain and central cafe stand, and where the aviary once stood. The obelisk is mounted on a plinth with two (now non-functioning)
drinking fountains either side (N&S); above each is the legend "
Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again. But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give them shall never thirst", taken from
St. John's Gospel. Above the fountains on each side of the plinth are four bronze plaques representing Smith's life and work. The front plaque (W) bears an image of Samuel Smith in high relief; and the two sides (N&S) have images of Christian charity, and the rear (E) plaque bears an inscription detailing his biography, and underneath "
Them that honour Me, I will honour". The plaque also states that the monument was raised by public subscription. The obelisk is
Grade II listed. An iron bridge was opened in 1873 which spans the Fairy Glen. There is a café in the centre of the park called the Aviary Cafe and a pirate themed children's play area opened in 2009.
Review field Barrage balloons and anti-aircraft guns were established on the Review Field in the Second World War.
Field of Hope The Field of Hope is an area in the south-east quarter of the park. It was planted with thousands of daffodil bulbs through a charitable planting programme and continues to bloom each year. In 1990 the
Marie Curie centre in Woolton, which had received a donation of daffodils from
Geests to be used for fundraising, had the idea of planting a "Field of Hope" in order to inspire cancer sufferers and carers. In co-operation with the city council, a million daffodils were planted across the south-east corner of the park. This has led to similar fields being established in other parts of the city, including Stanley Park, Clarke Gardens, and Woolton Village. ==Former features of the park==