This graph shows the cities with the most acres of parkland per 1,000 residents in the United States in 2023. In that year, Anchorage, Alaska, had the most parkland per 1,000 residents with approximately 3,022 acres of land.
In 2024, New York City had the highest public park and recreation spending of any city in the United States at approximately *** billion U.S. dollars. Second in the ranking was Chicago, Illinois, which spent around *** million U.S. dollars on parks and rec.
The city in the United States with the largest number of off-leash dog parks per 100,000 residents was Boise, Idaho, with nine off-leash dog parks per 100,000 residents in 2024. This is followed by Portland, Oregon which accounted for 5.7 dog parks per 100,000 residents.
In 2024, the city with the highest spending per capita on parks and recreation in the United States was Irvine, California. The city spent around 643 U.S. dollars per resident on parks and recreation that year.
In 2024, the city in the United States with the highest share of parkland was Anchorage, Alaska, where approximately 84 percent of the city was parkland. In second place, with almost half the percentage of parkland was Fremont, California, where 43 percent of the city was parkland.
In 2024, there were almost seven park playgrounds for every 10,000 residents in Cincinnati, Ohio, making it the city with the most playgrounds per 10,000 residents. Madison, Wisconsin followed behind, with roughly 6.5 park playgrounds for every 10,000 residents.
The Austin Parks and Recreation System's ranking on the Trust for Public Land ParkScore Index. This index ranks the park systems of the 100 largest cities in the U.S. based on park acreage, park size, park funding, park access, and a variety of other factors.
This data set supports HE.C.2 of SD23.
Data Source: Trust for Public Land (TPL) ParkScore Analysis
Calculation Method: The ParkScore is assessed by the Trust for Public Land Survey and Analysis. The areas that make up the ParkScore categories include adequate acreage in proportion to a city’s population, services/amenities and investment, and parkland access. The ParkScore Ranking is based on a comparison of 100 participating cities in the United States, and a city’s ranking is based on a composite of their raw score in each category. The higher the score, the lower the ranking number you are on the list of 100 cities. The most desirable ranking on the list is one, currently Austin is ranked 43 out of 100.
Measure Time Period: Annually (Calendar Year)
Automated: No
Date of last description update: 4/1/2020
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
The City of Irvine has once again been recognized for its outstanding park system, ranking second in the nation and first in California in the Trust for Public Land’s annual ParkScore Index. This recognition marks the 10th consecutive year the City has been ranked in the top 10.The ParkScore index is a national comparison of park systems across the 100 most populated cities in the United States and is recognized as the national gold standard comparison of park systems.Published annually, the index measures park systems according to five categories reflective of an excellent city park system: access, investment, amenities, acreage, and equity. While the rankings provide fodder for friendly competition, the goal each year of publishing the index is to help leaders advocate for needed park resources and provide relevant data to inform local park improvement efforts. To facilitate a fair comparison across cities, the index aggregates across all public and private organizations supporting parks in each city.
This table contains data on access to parks measured as the percent of population within ½ a mile of a parks, beach, open space or coastline for California, its regions, counties, county subdivisions, cities, towns, and census tracts. More information on the data table and a data dictionary can be found in the Data and Resources section. As communities become increasingly more urban, parks and the protection of green and open spaces within cities increase in importance. Parks and natural areas buffer pollutants and contribute to the quality of life by providing communities with social and psychological benefits such as leisure, play, sports, and contact with nature. Parks are critical to human health by providing spaces for health and wellness activities. The access to parks table is part of a series of indicators in the Healthy Communities Data and Indicators Project (HCI) of the Office of Health Equity. The goal of HCI is to enhance public health by providing data, a standardized set of statistical measures, and tools that a broad array of sectors can use for planning healthy communities and evaluating the impact of plans, projects, policy, and environmental changes on community health. The creation of healthy social, economic, and physical environments that promote healthy behaviors and healthy outcomes requires coordination and collaboration across multiple sectors, including transportation, housing, education, agriculture and others. Statistical metrics, or indicators, are needed to help local, regional, and state public health and partner agencies assess community environments and plan for healthy communities that optimize public health. The format of the access to parks table is based on the standardized data format for all HCI indicators. As a result, this data table contains certain variables used in the HCI project (e.g., indicator ID, and indicator definition). Some of these variables may contain the same value for all observations.
In 2024, New York had the highest number of park playgrounds in the U.S., totaling *****. Chicago came in second with *** park playgrounds.
This dataset identifies property managed partially or solely by NYC Parks. This data has been produced in whole or part using secondary data. Data accuracy is limited by the scale and accuracy of the original sources. Site-specific conditions should be field-verified.
Records are added as more land is designated under NYC Parks’ jurisdiction. Each record represents an acquisition.
User Guide: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1NExNJF5YKID04oOopi0fHainRuGG3Pz_jKSrMujPsPk/edit?usp=sharing
Data Dictionary: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Q4DBWu7riNFxWvy1vnTJHoOI3r2L9oW6eCN56jCNyCw/edit?usp=sharing
Open Database License (ODbL) v1.0https://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Official City of Cleveland Parks and Recreation Centers viewing application. This app contains information on the following:Recreation CentersOutdoor Recreation AmenitiesCity ParksCity Park AmenitiesMultiuse TrailsCleveland MetroparksClick here to use or download the underlying data for this application.InstructionsClick on any feature to learn more about it.Use the icons on the upper left hand corner to do the following:Present a legend of viewable features.Toggle layers.Search for a specific feature.Get directions to a location on the map.Update FrequencyAs neededThis application uses the following dataset(s):Cleveland Parks and Recreation SystemContactsJay Rauschenbach, Parks & Recreation Planning Manager, jrauschenbach@clevelandohio.gov
https://opendata.cityofboise.org/datasets/8108b95d77a7461ab5d47ab3f3bfa91f_0/license.jsonhttps://opendata.cityofboise.org/datasets/8108b95d77a7461ab5d47ab3f3bfa91f_0/license.json
This is a polygon dataset representing City of Boise Parks and Recreation data, based on the National Parks and Recreation Association (NRPA) GIS Data Model. A park is generally an area of land in a largely natural state, sometimes with grass, trees, paths, sports fields, playgrounds, picnic areas and other facilities, that is set aside and managed specifically for recreation use and enjoyment by the public. The features included in this polygon feature class are: parks and reserves.
This data set was created from a combination of Boise Parks and Recreation park and facility files and the Ada County Parcel records. This dataset was created by POWER Engineer's, Inc. and will be maintained by the City of Boise. This data set is updated at the request of Boise Parks and Recreation staff, as changes to the park data occur. It is current to the date it was published.
For more information about Boise parks and reserves, please visit City of Boise Parks & Recreation.
Description -There polygons represent known public and private parklands throughout the city of Baltimore. Attribute information includes details about park location, acreage, ownership, managing entity, and park category. Parks are categorized as:Citywide parks: Parks that serve residents across the entire city and host a variety of permitted and non-permitted recreational activities or facilities. They tend to be the larger parks in the city ranging from ten acres to over 990 acres in size. While this represents a wide range in size, several of the smaller parks are part of a larger contiguous park network.Neighborhood parks: These parks serve as basic units of the park system for users within a quarter to half-mile distance. They range between 1 and 28 acres in size and typically offer two or more amenities such as a playground, basketball court, athletic field, and green spaces. Many of the Neighborhood parks are informal in design, are clearly visible and located along well trafficked streets.Mini parks: Small parks that may include one or two amenities such as a pavilion, seating area, playground, or basketball court. Many of the Mini Parks are sited off the beaten path, some are located behind houses or bordered by less trafficked streets. These parks are typically less than 3 acres in size.Green spaces: Open lawn spaces without amenities and of varied size. These spaces serve as flexible spaces for active or passive use. Some include community gardens.Special use: Stand-alone park spaces that have a specific use or role associated with them.Forested spaces: Wooded or forested areas that may or may not be accessible to the public.Civic spaces: Spaces that are significant to the City’s history, host monuments or contain paved plazas that are used for citywide events and gatherings related to recreation and parks or other non BCRP related activities.Data updates on a rolling basis as new parks are constructed or old parks decommissioned. Last updated 01/12/2024. Metadata Contact : jason.chang@baltimorecity.gov To leave feedback or ask a question about this dataset, please fill out the following form: Parks feedback form.
Locations of Seattle Parks and Recreation (SPR) responsibilities within the city limits. SPR location responsibilities may include: ownership, leases, maintenance, temporary transfer of jurisdiction, life estate, crew quarters, headquarters, storage facilities, tidelands, joint use agreements. This is the detailed transactions level park GIS layer. It is the most current Parks GIS layer. Park uses can be sorted using the "Park Use" field. If you just want the Park outlines (boundaries) then use DPR.ParksBND. This is the presentation view of DPR.Parks_Edit.
Since PARD's eCOMBS measure #3033 - Number of City Park Acres per 1,000 Population is one of the items the department is asked about the most, the Planning and Development Division decided to post a story page and the fiscal year actuals.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
‘Total tweets’ enumerates all public tweets posted from a GPS latitude/longitude inside that city. ‘Park tweets’ is the total number of tweets posted from inside parks. The ‘% tweets in park’ column calculates Park tweets / total Tweets. ‘Park visitors’ is the number of unique users who tweeted inside one of that city’s municipal park locations as defined by Trust for Public Land’s ParkServe. ‘Parks visited’ is the number of unique facilities from which a tweet was posted within that city. ‘Tweets per capita’ is number of total messages for the entire period divided by the city’s population in 2012.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
This is a point dataset representing City of Boise Parks and Recreation parks data, based on the National Parks and Recreation Association (NRPA) GIS Data Model. A park is generally an area of land in a largely natural state, sometimes with grass, trees, paths, sports fields, playgrounds, picnic areas and other facilities, that is set aside and managed specifically for recreation use and enjoyment by the public. A reserve is a place set aside for special use. In this case, reserves are lands set aside and protected from future development for the enjoyment of the public as well as a haven for wildlife.This data set was created from a combination of Boise Parks and Recreation park and facility files and the Ada County Parcel records. This dataset was created by POWER Engineers, Inc. and will be maintained by the City of Boise. This data set is updated at the request of Boise Parks and Recreation staff as changes to the park data occur. It is current to the date it was published.For more information about Boise facilities, please visit City of Boise Parks & Recreation.
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
City-owned and leased facilities maintained in the City's Facility System of Record (FSR). This dataset was developed through a process involving some of the primary stewards for the facility data and their stakeholders. It is meant to be a living reference and will be maintained and updated through established workflows and processes over time. You can access the attached User Guide for more detail by clicking the red About button and scrolling to attachments.
This graph shows the cities with the most acres of parkland per 1,000 residents in the United States in 2023. In that year, Anchorage, Alaska, had the most parkland per 1,000 residents with approximately 3,022 acres of land.