Hyde Park | |
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Neighborhood | |
![]() Home in the Hyde Park Historic District.
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Location within the state of Florida | |
Coordinates: 27°56′13″N 82°28′32″W / 27.93694°N 82.47556°WCoordinates: 27°56′13″N 82°28′32″W / 27.93694°N 82.47556°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Florida |
County | Hillsborough |
City | Tampa |
Time zone | Eastern (EST) (UTC-5) |
• Summer (DST) | EDT (UTC-4) |
ZIP codes | 33606 |
Hyde Park is a historic neighborhood and district located within the city limits of Tampa. It includes Bayshore Boulevard, Hyde Park Village and SoHo. The ZIP code for the district is 33606. Hyde Park includes many historic homes and bungalows. Its history and proximity to downtown Tampa, make it a desirable residential neighborhood. Because of its convenient location within Tampa, there are a wealth of new developments being built within Hyde Park. This new construction includes the upscale shopping and dining destination of Hyde Park Village, as well as multi-family housing developments.[1]
Hyde Park is located adjacent to the University of Tampa and Downtown. Roughly, the boundaries of the neighborhood include the Hillsborough Bay to the east, Kennedy Blvd to the north, historic and picturesque Bayshore Boulevard to the east and south, and Armenia Avenue to the west. Major thoroughfares within the historical district include Kennedy Boulevard, Bayshore Boulevard, Lee Roy Selmon Expressway (SR 618), Howard Avenue, and Swann Avenue. Recently, entrepreuners have started small companies utilizing NEVs to shuttle pedestrians from the area to other core districts such as Downtown and Ybor City, as an attempt to facilitate connection between Tampa's core neighborhoods.
The neighborhood history begins back in the 1880s when railroad financier Henry B. Plant built the first bridge across the Hillsborough River at Lafayette Street (now John F. Kennedy Blvd.) The first house in the neighborhood was built by James Watrous in 1882 at 1307 Morrison Ave. Growth occurred rapidly and a street car line was put in on Swann Ave and Rome Ave. This is the reason for the wideness of the two streets, while most in the neighborhood are much narrower. The area where Old Hyde Park Village is today was originally called Cork Ave. Dakota Ave., Cork Ave., and Inman Ave. all intersected near where the British pay phone sits today. The only portion left of Cork Ave. today is called Snow Ave.