The private garden to the north of the Villa is entered through either of two entrances in the southern boundary wall which runs along the length of the property. Robert Adam (1728-92), who worked closely with Garrick on his theatre in Drury Lane, added a new front to the house and constructed the orangery (J Garden Hist 1986). Transport for London has put bus diversions in place around the area. It is now about 1.5 hectares, and in divided use and ownership. The C18 Hampton House (listed grade I), known since the mid C19 as Garrick's Villa, was acquired by David Garrick between 1753 and 1754 and altered by Robert Adam c 1756 and again in 1775. [2], The house was originally constructed in the Middle Ages. The floor is paved with stone slabs and flint-work. The original Hampton House and grounds were acquired by David Garrick between 1753 and 1754. By 1922 the Orangery had been converted into residential accommodation, and in the C20 a large part of the lawn was built on. The bank, from which there is a fine view of the Villa, now (1997) has a number of small trees growing along it, unlike the open aspect with light planting depicted in The Modern Universal British Traveller (Cooke 1779). The following photographs were taken on both sides of the river in … Numerous alterations were made to it during Garrick's tenure by Robert Adam,[3] [4] including the portico, the building of an orangery and the construction of a tunnel under the road to connect with his riverside lawn. Built in c 1756, it is an octagonal brick structure with a lead dome and once held Roubiliac's statue of Shakespeare. By 1755 Garrick had begun to build Shakespeare's Temple on the riverside part of the grounds. The Villa is separated from the Thames-side lawns (Temple Lawn) by Hampton Court Road. J Cooke, The Modern Universal British Traveller (1779), Country Life, 40 (23 December 1916), pp 756-62; 52 (9 December 1922), p 280; 130 (27 July 1961), p 201, D Stroud, Capability Brown (1975), pp 81-2, J Harris, The Artist and the Country House (1979), p 280, B Cherry and N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: London 2 South (1983), p 480, Sale map, 1822 (Richmond Local Studies Library), Sale map, 1838 (Richmond Local Studies Library), Description written: May 1998; Amended: October 2001. The approach to the garden from the west entrance crosses a paved area in front of the Villa to the east side of the site. THE GARDENS Garrick’s Lawn is the name of the garden beside the Thames that surrounds Garrick’s Temple to Shakespeare. It has a white-painted stucco front and is two storeys high with C20 wings added to either side of the C18 building and C20 garages on the north-west side.
From the Orangery there is a good view south across the lawn back to the house. Posted in 18th Century England, Architecture, Biography, Georgian Life, jane austen, tagged Charles Dickens, Dave Garrick, Dickens's Swiss Chalet, Gads Hill, Garrick's villa, Shakespearean actor, Thames river on November 26, 2010| 5 Comments » Mature trees and new plantings along the west side of the lawn help to attract the eye away from much of the new build. A country house described by English Heritage as “a building of national significance”. A wing was added to the west side of the house in 1864. Garrick's Villa is situated on the north bank of the Thames in the area known as Hampton, c1km west of Hampton Court Palace. The country house was acquired in 1754 by David Garrick. An at-a-glance overview of all our UK events. The Bushy Park Environment Centre at the south-west corner of Bushy Park (qv) lies to the east, beyond the late C20 Hogarth Way, and Johnson's Drive to the west. By the mid 1970s over 100 elm trees had been lost through Dutch Elm disease and much of the existing planting dates from this period. The brick boundary wall to the east of Hogarth Way continues 200m north to the Orangery with a narrow bed planted with small shrubs and trees at its base.
Garrick’s Villa – Grade I Listed Refurbishment Located along the banks of the Thames, near Hampton Court, is the Grade I Listed Garrick’s Villa. The structure was constructed in the Middle Ages. The Villa is separated from the Thames-side lawns (Temple Lawn) by Hampton Court Road. By 1755 Garrick had begun to build Shakespeare's Temple on the riverside part of the grounds; the architect is thought to be have been Lancelot Brown (J Garden Hist 1986), who between 1756 and 1757 advised Garrick on the small-scale landscape development, including the making of a tunnel beneath the road to connect the main northern garden with the riverside garden (Stroud 1975). cache 4h 2m The tunnel has battered sides faced with flint nodules and a segmental-arched tunnel vault lined with slag. The house was originally constructed in the Middle Ages.The country house was initially listed as …