Nottingham is celebrating Love Parks Week (14-23 July) by highlighting the city’s fantastic green spaces.
A Sunday Times article (9/7/17) revealed that 15.3% of Nottingham is covered in accessible green space – making it the second greenest city in Britain. Birmingham came top in the report produced by the Ordnance Survey, with 15.6% green space.
Parks and green spaces make up an overall 25% of the city. Even inaccessible green spaces bring important benefits for everyone; soaking up harmful pollution, lowering the temperature of the city and increasing biodiversity.
Parks in Nottingham are incredibly popular, and bring significant social and health benefits. The 2016 Nottingham Citizen’s Survey revealed that 46% of people in Nottingham visit a park once a week, with the majority (61%) spending times with friends and family in parks, 39% relaxing in parks and 36% exercising in parks.
Local people can join in with Love Parks week by:
- Tweeting using #LoveParks and sharing what your local park is and why they love it
- Visiting a park between 14-23 July and using one of our heart shaped boards to share why they love their local park. Three heart shaped boards will be in our parks, look out for our park rangers with them
- Wollaton is the biggest park at 511 acres
- Nottingham’s smallest park is the Commercial Road park, at just 0.15 acres
- Highfields Park was opened in 1923 and donated to the city by Jesse Boot in 1932
- The Forest Recreation Ground was the original home of Nottingham Forest Football club, and was also home to a race track in the late 1800s
- The Arboretum is Nottingham’s oldest park – and it’s thought to have been the inspiration for Neverland in J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan
- Biodiversity officers in Nottingham’s parks work to make our green spaces as bee and wildlife friendly as possible by planting wildflowers and leaving other areas to grow wild
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