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The Walks

Information on the Walks, an historic urban park in the heart of King's Lynn

The Walks, King's Lynn

The Walks in King's Lynn is open at all times, there is no charge for admission.

Entrances can be found at:

  • Tennyson Road
  • Extons Road
  • Saint James Road

Disabled access

The park is flat with tarmac paths throughout, entrances are level. RNIB React unit is located opposite the Red Mount Chapel.

Facilities and features

The Walks has the following facilities and features:

  • toilets
  • kiosk (seasonal openings vary)
  • play area for under 12's
  • play area for over 12's
  • a parkour unit
  • a multi use games area
  • the Red Mount Chapel
  • Bandstand

An historic urban park located in the heart of King's Lynn, The Walks is the only surviving 18th Century town walk in Norfolk.

A £4.3 million Heritage Lottery Fund restoration, completed in 2007, has returned this 17 hectare park to its former glory. It's also added modern amenities making it the perfect place to enjoy a relaxing stroll, and explore the history of the site.  

Parking for The Walks is available at the St James Multi-storey car park, which is only five minutes away on foot. For more information please see our car parks in King's Lynn page

Within the park there are two play areas, a parkour facility, a multi-use game area, a kiosk providing refreshments, and historic features including the Bandstand, the Guannock gate and the Red Mount Chapel. 

The History of the Walks

The Walks is an area of national importance. It was designated a Grade II listed Landscape in 1998 by English Heritage. Parks such as this, laid out for formal pleasure, only became common in the middle of the 19th Century.

St James park, the area that encloses the Fountain, is very much in this context, and was laid out in 1902-03. However, the wider area of The Walks had a different and earlier origin. It was first conceived not as a municipal park, but as a single promenade for the citizens to get away from the smell, grime and bustle of the town centre.

The remaining area of the Walks evolved over time between c.1686 and 1930, when the Walks predominately resembled the layout recognised today. 

Key Features

The Walks has a number of key features including The Guannock Gate and the Bandstand. These features are outlined below.

The Guannock Gate

The Guannock Gate was originally part of the town's defences, which included the nearby South Gate on London Road. 

Guannock is the name for the bank which formed part of these defences. They enclosed a large area and ran from north of The Fisher Fleet, via The Walks, to the South Gate and beyond to Whitefriars.

It is likely that only the gates and a short section of the wall either side were made from brick or stone. The rest comprised earth banks and ditches.  

During the period of demolition of the town walls in 1803 the Guannock Gate was demolished, to be re-erected as a landscape feature in 1816.

The Bandstand

In 1906 a proposal to create a new ornamental garden, to be named 'Vancouver Island' was suggested. This proposal was undertaken in the 1920s, complete with an octagonal bandstand. The 2007 renovations saw the island re-instated and developed, where the rivulet takes water from the Gaywood River to run around to outside edge of the garden.

The Bandstand is very popular and during the summer months. There are regular Sunday concerts between 2 and 4pm.

The Avenues 

Planted between 1843 and 1906, The Avenues form the most striking feature within the park, and form the essential framework of the designed landscape. Consisting of Lime, Horse Chestnut and Plane trees, the site takes its name from these dominant features.  No other historic public landscape has yet been identified which contains avenues spanning the date range of those in The Walks.

The Seven Sisters

This is one of the earliest known features of the designed landscape. It gives its name to one of the main promenades, to a bridge over the Gaywood River and to a former public house adjacent to the south entrance to the Seven Sisters Walk. 

As a raised platform it's an important visual element of the Seven Sisters Walk. It helps to restrict views of residential development to the south from the north section of the Walks.