Why It Matters

Open Green Space Access



Summary

We have calculated the distance from your postcode to the nearest type of Open Green Space. The categories of Open Green Space are as follows: Tennis courts; Religious grounds; Public Parks or Gardens; Playing Fields; Play Spaces; Golf Courses; Cemeteries; Bowling Greens; Allotments or Community Growing Spaces; Other Sports Facilities; Area’s of Outstanding Natural Beauty; and Forests.



Interpretation

We have measured several things to determine how much open space is available in your neighbourhood:

Dataset Explanation
Distance to Nearest Tennis Court This shows you how far the nearest Tennis Court is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Religious Ground This shows you how far the nearest Religious Ground is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Public Park or Garden This shows you how far the nearest Public Park or Garden is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Playing Field This shows you how far the nearest Playing Field is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Play Space This shows you how far the nearest Play Space is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Other Sports Facility This shows you how far the nearest Other Sports Facility is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Golf Course This shows you how far the nearest Golf Course is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Cemetery This shows you how far the nearest Cemetery is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Bowling Green This shows you how far the nearest Bowling Green is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Allotment or Community Growing Space This shows you how far the nearest Allotment or Community Growing Space is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty This shows you how far the nearest Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty is from your postcode
Distance to Nearest Woodland This shows you how far the nearest Woodland is from your postcode



Definition

Open Green Space describes recreational public spaces that residents visit in their free time. These include Tennis courts, Religious grounds, Public Parks or Gardens, Playing Fields, Play Spaces, Golf Courses, Cemeteries, Bowling Greens, Allotments or Community Growing Spaces, Other Sports Facilities, Area’s of Outstanding Natural Beauty and Forests. If a lawyer were to ask however, we’d define Public Open Space as space that offers opportunities for games (i.e. tennis, football, cricket etc), recreation or is of amenity value. This definition is inclusive of open space, whether publicly or privately owned, and where public access is partially restricted. Nonetheless residential gardens, shrub beds and verges that are completely private are excluded from the definition of Public Open Space.



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Richmond Park is London’s largest Royal Park and a nationally and internationally important place for wildlife conservation (Photograph: Peter O’Connor, Wikimedia Commons)



Why the metric matters from a commercial inhabitant’s perspective

The relative amount of Public Open Space accessible within a given area matters for commercial inhabitants, traditionally for two reasons. Firstly, a well maintained and accessible public environment has been shown to improve comparable trading revenues by 20-40% due to it having the power to attract more people into a given area. As Public Open Space is often a destination for urbanites in and of itself, it has been shown to engender consumer buying behaviours commonly associated with the leisure and entertainment sectors.

Secondly, for commercial inhabitants, Public Open Space, unless situated within a designated commercial zone such as is the case with Soho Square or Canada Square in Canary Wharf, is likely to prevent a business without a considerable pull factor for consumers from being able to benefit from the agglomeration benefits that clusters of business located in proximity often enjoy.



Why the metric matters from a residential inhabitant’s perspective

Public Open Spaces must be considered as a fundamental building block of any successful built environment. In neighbourhoods with above average levels of access to Public Open Space, there is a good body of evidence to show that said Public Open Space improves residents’ aptitude physical activities, provides an opportunity for social interaction and serves various other functions that improve the quality of life in cities such as reducing perceived stress levels. Aside from the benefits to overall wellbeing and health, access to Public Open Space has two further effects, namely that it often provides an uplift in the value of houses who benefit from being walkable proximate to the park or from the visual amenity Public Open Space affords those who overlook it.

Secondly, so long as planning policy seeks to protect and promote Public Open Space, it will remain as a protective factor that will commonly frustrate any nearby (re)development that is likely to inhibit the utility of a Public Open Space.



General commentary

Not without exception, as a general rule, the percentage of residents with access to Public Open Space in a given area is normally proportional to the distance an area is from central London. The theory follows that as the price of land decreases as in line with one’s distance from central London, it becomes more politically and economically permissible to dedicate land towards non-productive, but environmentally and socially beneficial uses. The proportion of land a community or city enshrines as Public Open Space is largely the product of historic local political decisions.

As mentioned, in London, planning policy obliges planning authorities to promote and protect Public Open Spaces, as repeated studies have shown that the benefits such spaces the local community and the local environment outweigh the economic and social cost of their upkeep. Whilst the value an individual may place on Public Open Space differs and is largely impossible to truly measure the value uplift to residences proximate to Public Open Space can be taken as evidence of Londoners’ preference to live near, or overlooking Public Open Spaces.

Quite uniquely in comparison to the other aspects of neighbourhoods we measure, Public Open Space is an aspect of the urban living that doesn’t change much over time, that is to say its supply is largely fixed as when London is considered as a whole. Therefore as the supply Public Open Space is not often something that is subject to net increases, when the opportunities to live proximate to, or overlooking it are also largely fixed.

Due to inflexible nature of Public Open Space, sub-cultures often form within their vicinity as is evidence by the numerous outdoor leisure activities, al fresco leisure activities and other social action that takes place near Public Open Spaces. These sub-cultures often then end up being associated with a given Public Open Space and have been shown to impact on people’s perceptions of a Public Open Space and therefore influence the type of people that are drawn to particular Public Open Spaces.

Beyond seeking out the highest possible level of Public Open Space we do not advise making any further conclusions as to what a Public Open Space score alone tells us about a neighbourhood. That being said, Public Open Space scores are useful for benchmarking and comparing areas with each other. They are also a useful indicator for other factors such as healthiness and activeness of a community.



Trivia

As of the end of 2017 roughly 20% of London was Public Open Space. Epping Forest is the largest Public Open Space in London, with nearly 6,000 acres of space.



History

In overcrowded Victorian London, Public Open Space, especially parks as provided by the then new municipalities and rich philanthropists were seen as a way of improving health and reducing public discontent. The relatively rare Public Open Spaces of London were added to, mostly in the form of physical recreation and sporting spaces as authorities in the 1930s and 1940s wanted to enhance the physical and moral welfare of the young, in order to make them “fit to fight”.

It was at the turn of the Millennium after several government mandated studies that policy makers began to recognise that well-managed Public Open Spaces improve the attractiveness of urban areas and help promote healthier life styles hence they became something that London’s governmental authorities now seek to protect and promote.