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Science
AGE OF THE PARK听
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The origins, decline and modern renaissance of our urban parks
Mondays听9.00-9.30pm 8 to听22 March 2004

Our town parks are some of the finest in the world and cherished by all of us.听But since their creation in the 19th century, they have fallen on hard times and are struggling to regain their past glory. Julian Pettifer explores the challenges which now face them

Parks

Our town parks are where most of us have our first contact with wildlife, where we arranged childhood picnics, fed the ducks on the lake and maybe even had our first encounter with romance! For many city dwellers they are a vital green lung, an escape from traffic noise and a way of shedding the stress of the working day. We may sometimes take them for granted, but nearly 70% of us use听a park and collectively we make a staggering 2.5 billion visits to parks every year.

Programme 1

Julian Pettifer explores the chequered history of our urban parks, from their Victorian heyday through the post war decline to the beginnings of a renaissance in the 21st century. Not all parks were created with the public in mind. St James鈥 Park in central London was once a boggy hunting ground for kings and nobleman and became a Royal Park in 1532; Admission was strictly for nobility and it wasn鈥檛 until nearly three centuries later that the public were allowed in.

Victorian parks, on the other hand,听were created specifically for people living in the rapidly expanding cities. The first, Birkenhead Park, designed by Sir Joseph Paxton, was so successful that it was used as inspiration for Central Park in听New York.

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Programme 2

In their heyday, urban parks were bustling with activity and听a focal point for major public events听such as coronations. But from the Second world War onwards, a series of events combined to lay them low. Railings were sequestered for the War Effort, leading to loss of status for parks.

Local government re-organisation in the 1970s favoured the new Leisure Services Departments with their preference for sports halls and leisure centres. Compulsory Competitive Tendering introduced in 1990, required councils to accept the lowest bid for maintenance works and so parks lost their dedicated staff to be replaced by mobile gangs of contractors. With the loss of a 鈥減arky鈥, vandalism increased and the public stayed away.

Julian explores the effects of neglect on our parks, the loss of colourful bedding displays and horticultural skills and听the decline of park furniture such as bandstands. But he also charts the beginnings of a renaissance and meets the听communities which refuse to let their local parks fade away. In Huddersfield, the magnificent Beaumont Park with its ornate buildings, steep cliffs and mature woodlands, is being lovingly restored by neighbours. In Runcorn, campaigners at Rock Park are helping the council to lever in funding which wouldn鈥檛 usually be available.

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Programme 3

The final programme in this series explores the way forward for our parks. There is still no statutory duty on local authorities to provide parks,听but now听that they听are being taken seriously听for social reasons, their landscape and wildlife benefits and for the part they can play in the nation鈥檚 health. Parks are being integrated into the urban landscape and a new challenge for urban greenspace is the Thames Gateway Project which puts parks and open spaces mainstage.

Julian hears from Chris Baines, a campaigner for urban greenspace, and Yvette Cooper MP, the minister with responsibility for regeneration of our parks.

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