Regent's Park vs Natural History Museum
Regent's Park and Natural History Museum are both endorsed by reviewers writing for major publications. Overall, Natural History Museum is the choice of most reviewers compared to Regent's Park. Natural History Museum has a TripExpert Score of 92 with recommendations from 9 publications like Let's Go, Michelin Guide and Lonely Planet.
Regent's Park
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Inner Circle, London NW1 4NR
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Fodor's
"Today the 395-acre park, boasting the largest outdoor sports area in central London, draws the athletically inclined from around the city."
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Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"The most elaborate and ordered of London’s many parks, this one was created around 1820 by John Nash, who planned to use it as an estate to build palaces for the aristocracy."
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Time Out
"Regent's Park is one of London's most popular open spaces, covering 410 acres in north-west London."
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Condé Nast Traveler
"Made up of 166 hectares and has a rose garden with more than 400 varieties of roses."
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Afar Magazine
"Regent's Park in London lives up to its name and is quite royal, boasting rows of manicured flowers and plants."
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Natural History Museum
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Natural History Museum Cromwell Rd London SW7 5BD
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Fodor's
"The ornate terracotta facade of this enormous Victorian museum is strewn with relief panels depicting living creatures to the left of the entrance and extinct ones to the right."
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Concierge
"This is just one of the three huge galleries (all free) off Exhibition Road in South Kensington, the others being the Science Museum and the V&A."
Time Out
"Both a research institution and a fabulous museum, the NHM opened in Alfred Waterhouse’s purpose-built Romanesque palazzo on the Cromwell Road in 1881."
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Let's Go
"Beeline for the back of the museum to see the unrepeatable Cadogan Gallery: a collection of British treasures."
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Michelin Guide
2 Stars
"Built by Alfred Waterhouse between 1873 and 1880 to a symmetrical plan, the building is 205m long with two 58m-high central towers above an entrance embellished by arches."
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