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Great parks, great cities The decline and renewal of the urban park tradition in the UK, and beyond. Ken Worpole University of Greenwich 19 October 2005.

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Presentation on theme: "Great parks, great cities The decline and renewal of the urban park tradition in the UK, and beyond. Ken Worpole University of Greenwich 19 October 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 Great parks, great cities The decline and renewal of the urban park tradition in the UK, and beyond. Ken Worpole University of Greenwich 19 October 2005

2 Park Life & People, Parks & Cities  The report ‘Park Life’ (1995) was described as ‘a report which will change for ever the way we thinks about parks.’  A collaboration between two think-tanks: Comedia & Demos.  Inspired setting up of the Heritage Lottery Fund’s ‘Public Parks Initiative’. 

3 PRINCIPAL FINDINGS (Based on 1000 interviews and analysis of 10,000 users) Most people visit parks in company of others 70% walk to parks 40% claimed to use their local park every day 1 dog for every 8 people Slightly more men than women Many more people use parks than policy-makers and providers realise A wider cross-section of users than most other leisure facilities.

4 THE URBAN GREEN SPACES TASK FORCE (2002)  Over 30 million people in England (70%) use parks frequently. 2 billion annual visits.  Decrease in quality; poor public image  Public spending favours indoor over outdoor leisure  Work in partnership with communities  Develop Green Flag Award  Establish national agency

5 TYPOLOGY OF GREEN SPACES Parks & urban gardens Play parks Housing amenity land Sports grounds Allotments & community gardens City farms Cemeteries Commons & woodlands Canal paths & linear parks Civic squares/ornamental gardens

6 THE TWO CULTURES OF LEISURE (From Greener Spaces, Better Places) Spending on ‘Urban parks and open spaces’ dropped from 44% of local authority spending in 1976/77 to 31% of spending in 1998/99. Spending on Country parks, nature reserves and tourism increased from 7% to 17%.

7 THE TWO CULTURES OF LEISURE (From Greener Spaces, Better Places) RECREATIONAL CULTURE 70% walk All ages All social groups £600m for 2.5 billion visits FITNESS CULTURE Over 80% drive Pre-dominantly 18 - 45 Mostly professional users £400m for 100 million visits

8 PARKS ARE PLACES FOR EVERYONE

9 MANY DIFFERENT KINDS OF PARKS

10 MODERN PARKS IN EUROPE

11 THE GREEN FLAG Eight Green Flag Criteria 1.A welcoming place 2.Healthy, safe & secure 3.Clean and well-maintained 4.Run sustainably 5.Conservation & heritage 6.Community involvement 7.Marketing 8.Management

12 NEW ARCHITECTURE IN HISTORIC PARKS New structures are likely to include: Kiosks & cafes Toilet blocks Playgrounds Visitor centres Community centres Memorial gardens

13 THE RISE OF ECOLOGY

14 CABE Space  Established 2003  Makes the case for parks & public space  Supports local authority strategies  Strengthens & expands Green Flag scheme  Acts as advocacy &research agency

15 FUTURE STRATEGIC GOALS  Parks make town and cities - vital to urban and social renewa.l  More socially inclusive and healthier than indoor leisure.  Many other government objectives - community development, child-friendly culture, improved healt, environmental sustainability - can be achieved through investment in parks.  Good design is vital - and so is adequate revenue funding for maintenance.  Greater typological diversity. 


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