Access to Public Open Space and Nature by Ward

Tables show the proportion of homes located within public open space, and access to nature boundaries.

Areas of deficiency in access to nature are defined as built-up areas more than one kilometre actual walking distance from an accessible Metropolitan or Borough Site of Interest for Nature Conservation (SINC).

The analysis of public open space is based on access to designated green/public open space and therefore excludes farmland, and other types of green space outside of the public open space category definitions within the London Plan.

These measures take no account of additional public rights of way, that can also give the same benefits as more formal open spaces.

Homes further away than the maximum recommended distance are considered to be deficient in access to that type of public open space (POS).

The recommended distances for each type, as per the London Plan, are:

R - Regional Parks = 8km max

M - Metropolitan Parks = 3.2km max

D - District = 1.2km max

LSP - Local, Small and Pocket parks = 400 metres max.

For a definition of public open space types refer to the London Plan 2011, Table 7.2

Higher category parks also perform the function of lower category parks, e.g. a Metropolitan Park also functions as a District Park and a Local Park.

The distance is actual walking distance (taking into account fences, railway lines, rivers etc.) to reach access points of parks and other, generally managed, sites, usually with some facilities.

This measure takes no account of the quality or facilities at each open space.

No account of local, small and pocket parks outside the Greater London boundary has been made, though all regional, metropolitan and district parks in the vicinity of London have been included.

Residental addresses provided by Ordnance Survey.

Wards in the City of London have been merged to create one area.

Visit the Greenspace Information for Greater London (GiGL) website [here] (http://www.gigl.org.uk/ "Greenspace Information for Greater London")

Cite this as

None (2023). Access to Public Open Space and Nature by Ward [Data set]. University of Glasgow. https://doi.org/10.5525/bt2a9zze
Private DOI This DOI is not yet resolvable.
It is available for use in manuscripts, and will be published when the Dataset is made public.

Additional Info

Title Access to Public Open Space and Nature by Ward
Alternative title
URL access-public-open-space-and-nature-ward
Description

Tables show the proportion of homes located within public open space, and access to nature boundaries.

Areas of deficiency in access to nature are defined as built-up areas more than one kilometre actual walking distance from an accessible Metropolitan or Borough Site of Interest for Nature Conservation (SINC).

The analysis of public open space is based on access to designated green/public open space and therefore excludes farmland, and other types of green space outside of the public open space category definitions within the London Plan.

These measures take no account of additional public rights of way, that can also give the same benefits as more formal open spaces.

Homes further away than the maximum recommended distance are considered to be deficient in access to that type of public open space (POS).

The recommended distances for each type, as per the London Plan, are:

R - Regional Parks = 8km max

M - Metropolitan Parks = 3.2km max

D - District = 1.2km max

LSP - Local, Small and Pocket parks = 400 metres max.

For a definition of public open space types refer to the London Plan 2011, Table 7.2

Higher category parks also perform the function of lower category parks, e.g. a Metropolitan Park also functions as a District Park and a Local Park.

The distance is actual walking distance (taking into account fences, railway lines, rivers etc.) to reach access points of parks and other, generally managed, sites, usually with some facilities.

This measure takes no account of the quality or facilities at each open space.

No account of local, small and pocket parks outside the Greater London boundary has been made, though all regional, metropolitan and district parks in the vicinity of London have been included.

Residental addresses provided by Ordnance Survey.

Wards in the City of London have been merged to create one area.

Visit the Greenspace Information for Greater London (GiGL) website [here] (http://www.gigl.org.uk/ "Greenspace Information for Greater London")

Content
Subjects
Topics
Dataset Citation
Time Period Coverage
Geographical Coverage
Spatial Units
Observation Units
Resource Type
Data Format
Weighting
Method of Collection
Collection Status
Dataset Aggregation
Data Owner
Data Owner Url
License
Licence Specifics
Provider 4e06fc35-036b-4f91-a58d-6876c15a15d2
Version
Dataset Available
Dataset Closed
Dataset Valid
Dataset Updating Frequency
Dataset Next Version Due
Date Published 2023-11-06
Date of Fieldwork
Dataset File Type
Dataset File Size 0
Dataset Creation Date
Dataset Access Restrictions
Metadata Created Date
Metadata Created Institution
Dataset Fields (0)