Roath Park
Roath Park is Cardiff's most celebrated and best-loved public park, a large Victorian park of approximately 130 acres in the Roath and Heath districts of the city, featuring a boating lake, formal rose gardens, a glasshouse, bandstand, sports facilities and the remarkable Scott Memorial lighthouse that commemorates Captain Robert Falcon Scott of the Antarctic who departed from Cardiff on his ill-fated final expedition to the South Pole in 1910. The park was opened in 1894 and the lake is the central feature, popular for boating, feeding wildfowl and enjoying the views across the water. The botanical gardens within Roath Park contain a glasshouse with tropical and Mediterranean plants and extensive garden beds providing seasonal colour throughout the year. Roath Park is one of the most frequently used and deeply appreciated green spaces in the Welsh capital and admission is free.