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Jubilee Gardens, Lambeth

Jubilee Gardens is a public park on the South Bank in the London Borough of Lambeth. Created in 1977 to mark the Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II, the site was formerly used for the Dome of Discovery and the adjacent Skylon during the Festival of Britain in 1951. A multimillion-pound redevelopment of the park was completed in May 2012, just before the Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II and the 2012 Summer Olympics, in order to transform it from a state of grassland to a mature looking park with trees and hills. The re-developed Gardens were designed by Dutch landscape architects West 8. Queen Elizabeth II reopened the gardens in October 2012.

Gallery
File:International brigade memorial.02.JPG|International Brigades Memorial with LCC building. Stays for the London Eye can also be seen. File:Paving stone in memory of John Dimmer.jpg|Commemorative plaque in memory of John Dimmer File:London Eye from Jubilee gardens.JPG|London Eye and LCC building from the middle of Jubilee Gardens, in its former state as grassland. File:Internationa brigade memorial.03.JPG|International Brigades Memorial with London Eye in the background. File:Jubilee Gardens.JPG|View of Jubilee Gardens before redevelopment, with Hungerford Bridge in background. ==See also==
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