14 datasets found
  1. e

    Focus on London - Population and Migration

    • data.europa.eu
    • data.ubdc.ac.uk
    • +1more
    pdf, unknown
    Updated Aug 25, 2024
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    GLA Intelligence Unit (2024). Focus on London - Population and Migration [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/focus-on-london-population-and-migration-1/embed
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    pdf, unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 25, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    GLA Intelligence Unit
    Area covered
    London
    Description

    This report was released in September 2010. However, recent demographic data is available on the datastore - you may find other datasets on the Datastore useful such as: GLA Population Projections, National Insurance Number Registrations of Overseas Nationals, Births by Birthplace of Mother, Births and Fertility Rates, Office for National Statistics (ONS) Population Estimates

    FOCUSONLONDON2010:POPULATIONANDMIGRATION

    London is the United Kingdom’s only city region. Its population of 7.75 million is 12.5 per cent of the UK population living on just 0.6 per cent of the land area. London’s average population density is over 4,900 persons per square kilometre, this is ten times that of the second most densely populated region.

    Between 2001 and 2009 London’s population grew by over 430 thousand, more than any other region, accounting for over 16 per cent of the UK increase.

    This report discusses in detail the population of London including Population Age Structure, Fertility and Mortality, Internal Migration, International Migration, Population Turnover and Churn, and Demographic Projections.

    Population and Migration report is the first release of the Focus on London 2010-12 series. Reports on themes such as Income, Poverty, Labour Market, Skills, Health, and Housing are also available.

    REPORT:

    Read the full report in PDF format.

    https://londondatastore-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/fol/FocusOnLondonCoverweb.jpg" alt=""/>

    PRESENTATION:

    To access an interactive presentation about population changes in London click the link to see it on Prezi.com

    DATA:

    To access a spreadsheet with all the data from the Population and Migration report click on the image below.

    Report data

    MAP:

    To enter an interactive map showing a number of indicators discussed in the Population and Migration report click on the image below.

    Interactive Maps

    FACTS:

    ● Top five boroughs for babies born per 10,000 population in 2008-09:

    1. Newham – 244.4
    2. Barking and Dagenham – 209.3
    3. Hackney – 205.7
    4. Waltham Forest – 202.7
    5. Greenwich – 196.2

    -32. Havering – 116.8

    -33. City of London – 47.0

    ● In 2009, Barnet overtook Croydon as the most populous London borough. Prior to this Croydon had been the largest since 1966

    ● Population per hectare of land used for Domestic building and gardens is highest in Tower Hamlets

    ● In 2008-09, natural change (births minus deaths) led to 78,000 more Londoners compared with only 8,000 due to migration. read more about this or click play on the chart below to reveal how regional components of populations change have altered over time.

  2. v

    Ordnance survey of Great Britain, one inch to one mile map: Greater London.

    • gis.lib.virginia.edu
    Updated Feb 12, 2017
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    Director General of the Ordnance Survey (2017). Ordnance survey of Great Britain, one inch to one mile map: Greater London. [Dataset]. http://identifiers.org/ark:/88435/hm50tt19g
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 12, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    Ordnance Surveyhttps://os.uk/
    Authors
    Director General of the Ordnance Survey
    Area covered
    United Kingdom, London, England
    Description

    This is a city map of London, England, shown at a 1:63,360 scale. This city map was created by the Director General of the Ordnance Survey.

  3. U

    Focus on London - Housing

    • data.ubdc.ac.uk
    • data.europa.eu
    • +1more
    pdf, xls
    Updated Nov 8, 2023
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    Greater London Authority (2023). Focus on London - Housing [Dataset]. https://data.ubdc.ac.uk/dataset/focus-on-london-housing
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    pdf, xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 8, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Greater London Authority
    Area covered
    London
    Description

    FOCUSON**LONDON**2011: HOUSING:A**GROWING**CITY

    With the highest average incomes in the country but the least space to grow, demand for housing in London has long outstripped supply, resulting in higher housing costs and rising levels of overcrowding. The pressures of housing demand in London have grown in recent years, in part due to fewer people leaving London to buy homes in other regions. But while new supply during the recession held up better in London than in other regions, it needs to increase significantly in order to meet housing needs and reduce housing costs to more affordable levels.

    This edition of Focus on London authored by James Gleeson in the Housing Unit looks at housing trends in London, from the demand/supply imbalance to the consequences for affordability and housing need.

    REPORT:

    Read the report in PDF format.

    https://londondatastore-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/fol/fol11-housing-cover-thumb.jpg" alt="">

    PRESENTATION:

    How much pressure is London’s popularity putting on housing provision in the capital? This interactive presentation looks at the effect on housing pressure of demographic changes, and recent new housing supply, shown by trends in overcrowding and house prices. Click on the start button at the bottom of the slide to access.

    View Focus on London - Housing: A Growing City on Prezi

    HISTOGRAM:

    This histogram shows a selection of borough data and helps show areas that are similar to one another by each indicator.

    Histogram

    MOTION CHART:

    This motion chart shows how the relationship, between key housing related indicators at borough level, changes over time.

    Motion Chart

    MAP:

    These interactive borough maps help to geographically present a range of housing data within London, as well as presenting trend data where available.

    MAP

    DATA:

    All the data contained within the Housing: A Growing City report as well as the data used to create the charts and maps can be accessed in this spreadsheet.

    FACTS:

    Some interesting facts from the data…

    ● Five boroughs with the highest proportion of households that have lived at their address for less than 12 months in 2009/10:

    1. Westminster – 19 per cent
    2. Wandsworth – 17 per cent
    3. Camden – 16 per cent
    4. Lambeth – 14 per cent
    5. Southwark – 13 per cent

    -31. Harrow – 6 per cent

    -32. Havering – 5 per cent

    ● Five boroughs with the highest percentage point increase between 2004 and 2009 of households in the ‘private rented’ sector:

    1. Newham – 17 per cent
    2. Greenwich – 11 per cent
    3. Enfield – 10 per cent
    4. Camden – 9 per cent
    5. Harrow – 8 per cent

    -32. Islington – 1 per cent

    -33. Bexley – 1 per cent

    ● Five boroughs with the highest percentage difference in median house prices between 2007 Q4 and 2010 Q4:

    1. Kensington & Chelsea – 29 per cent
    2. Westminster – 19 per cent
    3. Camden – 15 per cent
    4. Islington – 14 per cent
    5. Southwark – 10 per cent

    -31. Newham – down 9 per cent

    -32. Barking & D’ham – down 9 per cent

  4. U

    Statistical GIS Boundary Files for London

    • data.ubdc.ac.uk
    • data.europa.eu
    • +1more
    shp
    Updated Nov 8, 2023
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    Greater London Authority (2023). Statistical GIS Boundary Files for London [Dataset]. https://data.ubdc.ac.uk/dataset/statistical-gis-boundary-files-london
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    shpAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 8, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Greater London Authority
    Area covered
    London
    Description

    The Zip folder contains a range of key GIS boundary files for ESRI and Map Info covering Greater London.

    The folder includes:

    - Output Area (OA) 2011,

    - Lower Super Output Area (LSOA) 2004 and 2011,

    - Middle Super Output Area (MSOA) 2004 and 2011,

    - London Wards (City of London merged into single area)

    - London Boroughs

    Note: The OA to MSOA boundaries have been generalised to reduce file size/loading time.

    On maps created using these boundaries the copyright must be stated. This is: "Contains National Statistics data © Crown copyright and database right [2012]" and "Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right [2012]"

    For more information about boundary data sharing read these Terms and Conditions of Supply.

  5. d

    Serviced Offices Points

    • data.gov.uk
    Updated Jun 8, 2021
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    City of London (2021). Serviced Offices Points [Dataset]. https://data.gov.uk/dataset/905c060c-4587-4c4a-bd4d-b1f4091dcdac/serviced-offices-points
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 8, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of London
    License

    https://data.gov.uk/dataset/905c060c-4587-4c4a-bd4d-b1f4091dcdac/serviced-offices-points#licence-infohttps://data.gov.uk/dataset/905c060c-4587-4c4a-bd4d-b1f4091dcdac/serviced-offices-points#licence-info

    Description

    Businesses looking to locate in the City of London who need a flexible, short-term office solution serviced office space or co-working space could provide the perfect solution. The attached information will help businesses decide what type of office they require. The serviced office map will help businesses to locate serviced office providers in the City and City Fringe. Our map show the location of serviced offices in relation to transport links and key landmarks.

  6. d

    Natural Capital County Atlas Mapping (England)

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    • data.europa.eu
    zip
    Updated Oct 14, 2020
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    Natural England (2020). Natural Capital County Atlas Mapping (England) [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/347c87af-15fb-4775-b893-336ac10b34d7
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 14, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Natural Englandhttp://www.gov.uk/natural-england
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This spatial dataset is an output of the Natural England County & City Natural Capital Atlas project (July 2020). It shows variation in ecosystem service flow for habitats across England, based on indicators identified by NE in the 2018 Natural Capital Indicators project. The dataset comprises a hexagonal grid which summarises indicator values across the country (each unit = 5km²).

    Natural Capital is an important aspect of current environmental policy and management. This dataset, in combination with the other project outputs, will support understanding of Natural Capital in England and serve as a valuable engagement tool to communicate concepts of the Natural Capital approach to a wide variety of stakeholders.

    For full methodology and user guide see documents ‘NCAtlas_Devon’ and ‘NC-Mapping-User-Guidance’ at http://publications.naturalengland.org.uk/publication/6672365834731520.

    For full metadata documentation see the data package download below.

    Copyright statement: LCM2015 © NERC (CEH) 2011. Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown Copyright 2007. © Defra. Contains Defra information © Defra - Project MB0102. © Environment Agency. © Forestry Commission. © Historic England [year]. © Joint Nature Conservation Committee. © Natural England copyright. Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right [year]. Contains data supplied by © NERC - Centre for Ecology & Hydrology. © Natural England copyright. Natural England Licence No. 2011/052 British Geological Survey © NERC, all rights reserved, © NSRI Cranfield University. Contains National Statistics data © Crown copyright and database right [year]. Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right [year]. Contains Rural Payments Agency. © Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council. © Bath & North East Somerset Council. © Bedford Borough Council. © London Borough of Bexley. © Birmingham City Council. © Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council. © Blackpool Council. © Bolton Council. © BCP Council. © Bracknell Forest Council. © City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council. © Brighton & Hove City Council. © Bristol City Council. © London Borough of Bromley. © Buckinghamshire County Council. © Bury Council. © Calderdale Council. © Cambridgeshire County Council. © Central Bedfordshire Council. © Cheshire East Council. © Cheshire West and Chester Council. © Cornwall Council. © Cumbria County Council. © Derbyshire County Council. © Devon County Council. © Doncaster Council. © Dorset Council. © Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council. © Durham County Council. © East Riding of Yorkshire Council. © East Sussex County Council. © Essex County Council. © Gateshead Council. © Gloucestershire County Council. © Hampshire County Council. © Herefordshire Council. © Hertfordshire County Council. © Hull City Council. © Isle of Anglesey County Council. © Isle of Wight Council. © Kent County Council. © Kirklees Council. © Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council. © Lake District National Park. © Lancashire County Council. © Leicester City Council. © Leicestershire County Council. © Lincolnshire County Council. © Manchester City Council. © Medway Council. © Norfolk County Council. © North Lincolnshire Council. © North Somerset Council. © North Yorkshire County Council. © Northamptonshire County Council. © Northumberland County Council. © Nottingham City Council. © Nottinghamshire County Council. © Oldham Council. © Oxfordshire County Council. © Peterborough City Council. © Plymouth City Council. © Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council. © Portsmouth City Council. © Reading Borough Council. © Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council. © Rochdale Borough Council. © Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council. © Rutland County Council. © Salford City Council. © Sefton Council. © Sheffield City Council. © Shropshire Council. © Slough Borough Council. © Somerset County Council. © South Gloucestershire Council. © Southampton City Council. © St Helens Council. © Staffordshire County Council. © Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council. © Stockton Council. © Suffolk County Council. © Surrey County Council. © Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council. © Thurrock Council. © Torbay Council. © Trafford Council. © Wakefield Council. © Walsall Council. © Warrington Borough Council. © Warwickshire County Council. © West Berkshire Council. © West Sussex County Council. © Wigan Council. © Wiltshire Council. © Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead Council. © Wirral Council. © Wokingham Borough Council. © Worcestershire County Council. © City of York Council.

  7. London Green and Blue Cover

    • brightstripe.co.uk
    • data.europa.eu
    pdf, xlsx, zip
    Updated Jul 12, 2023
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    Greater London Authority (2023). London Green and Blue Cover [Dataset]. https://www.brightstripe.co.uk/dataset/79b1e8d8-8fce-487b-baae-67feb550cbec/london-green-and-blue-cover.html
    Explore at:
    zip, xlsx, pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 12, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Greater London Authorityhttp://www.london.gov.uk/
    License

    https://www.data.gov.uk/dataset/79b1e8d8-8fce-487b-baae-67feb550cbec/london-green-and-blue-cover#licence-infohttps://www.data.gov.uk/dataset/79b1e8d8-8fce-487b-baae-67feb550cbec/london-green-and-blue-cover#licence-info

    Description

    The GLA have produced a dataset that provides a more accurate estimate of the extent of the London’s green infrastructure - the city’s parks, gardens, trees, green spaces, rivers and wetlands, and features such as green roofs.

    The green cover layer was created by combining classified near-infrared aerial imagery (NDVI) with land use datasets and resulted in a green cover estimate for London of between 48-51 percent. The baseline is presented as a range to account for variations in the analysis of aerial imagery. The methodology is set out in the report below and a web map created to visualise the data.

    The final green cover layer is available to download in a geospatial format (shape files).

    **Contains OS data **© Crown copyright and database rights 2019.

    Contains Verisk **Analytics ** GeoInformation Group UKMap data.

    NOTE: The data is based on Ordnance Survey mapping and the data is published under Ordnance Survey's 'presumption to publish'.

  8. d

    Public Right of Way

    • data.gov.uk
    Updated Jun 8, 2021
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    City of London (2021). Public Right of Way [Dataset]. https://data.gov.uk/dataset/eff2f2b3-ffa0-40e0-944e-d1f76915fb2b/public-right-of-way
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 8, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of London
    License

    https://data.gov.uk/dataset/eff2f2b3-ffa0-40e0-944e-d1f76915fb2b/public-right-of-way#licence-infohttps://data.gov.uk/dataset/eff2f2b3-ffa0-40e0-944e-d1f76915fb2b/public-right-of-way#licence-info

    Description

    Privately Maintainable Highway forms part of the Public Access Map. This includes: • City Walkways and Proposed City Walkways • Permissive Paths • Highway Maintainable at Public Expense • Privately Maintainable Highway • Special Act Land • Statutory Open Spaces • Highway Subway • Permissive Subway The map showing highway status is provided after appropriate enquiry and in the belief that it represents the information at present available to the Corporation but on the distinct understanding that neither the Corporation nor any council officer is legally responsible for the reply, except for negligence. The plan should not be taken to imply that the boundary of the property directly abuts the public highway. Privately Maintainable Highway: The public have a right to pass and repass in perpetuity. The highway is maintainable by the landowner.

  9. Data from: Chatty maps: constructing sound maps of urban areas from social...

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • zenodo.org
    • +1more
    zip
    Updated Feb 29, 2016
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    Luca Maria Aiello; Rossano Schifanella; Daniele Quercia; Francesco Aletta (2016). Chatty maps: constructing sound maps of urban areas from social media data [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.tg735
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 29, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    University of Turin
    University of Sheffield
    Bell Labs, Cambridge, UK
    Yahoo Labs, London, UK
    Authors
    Luca Maria Aiello; Rossano Schifanella; Daniele Quercia; Francesco Aletta
    License

    https://spdx.org/licenses/CC0-1.0.htmlhttps://spdx.org/licenses/CC0-1.0.html

    Description

    Urban sound has a huge influence over how we perceive places. Yet, city planning is concerned mainly with noise, simply because annoying sounds come to the attention of city officials in the form of complaints, whereas general urban sounds do not come to the attention as they cannot be easily captured at city scale. To capture both unpleasant and pleasant sounds, we applied a new methodology that relies on tagging information of georeferenced pictures to the cities of London and Barcelona. To begin with, we compiled the first urban sound dictionary and compared it with the one produced by collating insights from the literature: ours was experimentally more valid (if correlated with official noise pollution levels) and offered a wider geographical coverage. From picture tags, we then studied the relationship between soundscapes and emotions. We learned that streets with music sounds were associated with strong emotions of joy or sadness, whereas those with human sounds were associated with joy or surprise. Finally, we studied the relationship between soundscapes and people's perceptions and, in so doing, we were able to map which areas are chaotic, monotonous, calm and exciting. Those insights promise to inform the creation of restorative experiences in our increasingly urbanized world.

  10. d

    Permissive Subway

    • data.gov.uk
    • cloud.csiss.gmu.edu
    • +1more
    Updated Jun 8, 2021
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    City of London (2021). Permissive Subway [Dataset]. https://data.gov.uk/dataset/c91a7563-faf7-4fbd-acfa-405e1c0758e8/permissive-subway
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 8, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of London
    License

    https://data.gov.uk/dataset/c91a7563-faf7-4fbd-acfa-405e1c0758e8/permissive-subway#licence-infohttps://data.gov.uk/dataset/c91a7563-faf7-4fbd-acfa-405e1c0758e8/permissive-subway#licence-info

    Description

    Permissive Subway forms part of the Public Access Map. This includes: • City Walkways and Proposed City Walkways • Permissive Paths • Highway Maintainable at Public Expense • Privately Maintainable Highway • Special Act Land • Statutory Open Spaces • Highway Subway • Permissive Subway The map showing highway status is provided after appropriate enquiry and in the belief that it represents the information at present available to the Corporation but on the distinct understanding that neither the Corporation nor any council officer is legally responsible for the reply, except for negligence. The plan should not be taken to imply that the boundary of the property directly abuts the public highway. Permissive Subway: Subway under the Highway (not maintained by City of London Corporation i.e. Transport for London).

  11. o

    The merchants map of commerce wherein the universal manner and matter...

    • llds.phon.ox.ac.uk
    • llds.ling-phil.ox.ac.uk
    Updated Jan 24, 2025
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    Lewes Roberts; Thomas Mun; John. Advice concerning bills of exchange. Marius (2025). The merchants map of commerce wherein the universal manner and matter relating to trade and merchandize are fully treated of, the standard and current coins of most princes and republicks observ'd, the real and imaginary coins of accounts and exchanges express'd, the natural products and artificial commodities and manufactures for transportation declar'd, the weights and measures of all eminent cities and towns of traffick in the universe, collected one into another, and all reduc'd to the meridian of commerce practis'd in the famous city of London / by Lewis Roberts, merchant. [Dataset]. https://llds.phon.ox.ac.uk/llds/xmlui/handle/20.500.14106/A57390?show=full
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 24, 2025
    Authors
    Lewes Roberts; Thomas Mun; John. Advice concerning bills of exchange. Marius
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    City of London, London
    Description

    (:unav)...........................................

  12. Borough Council Election Results 2010

    • data.wu.ac.at
    • data.ubdc.ac.uk
    • +2more
    csv, html, pdf, xls
    Updated Mar 15, 2018
    + more versions
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    Greater London Authority (GLA) (2018). Borough Council Election Results 2010 [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/odso/data_gov_uk/NmIwMmUxZTEtOWJiZS00YTRiLWEwMGUtZmVkZjlmZDhmZDUz
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    xls, csv, pdf, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 15, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Greater London Authorityhttp://www.london.gov.uk/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    London Borough Council Elections - 6 May 2010 With the aim of making the democratic process as transparent as possible to the London electorate, this report includes a great deal of detail on every aspect of the 2010 London Borough council general elections. No other single volume presents the full results and election statistics from the 32 London boroughs enabling the reader to analyse and compare the results across London in one place. The report presents data for every candidate in every ward (excluding the City of London which operates on a different electoral model). Summaries are provided in the form of maps and tables, and to make comparisons easier, they mostly match those included in the 2006 report with a few useful additions. Results of all council by-elections between the general elections in 2006 and 2010, as well as details of the elections in the three boroughs that directly elect a mayor, are also presented here. This is the latest report in a long series of council election reports dating back to 1964. Find other election reports at http://data.london.gov.uk/elections/ REPORT: The report is available in PDF format. Hard copies are available from the Intelligence Unit for £20. Please contact intelligence@london.gov.uk or tel 020 7983 4922 (credit card or cheque accepted). DATA: All the data contained within the 'London Borough Council Elections 2010' report can be accessed in this spreadsheet. This contains results for each candidate standing in all 624 wards in the London boroughs (excluding the City of London which operates on a different electoral model). Also available in the following spreadsheets: ● Full results for every ward and every candidate from 2006 and 2010 ● A summary of the number of seats won by each party by borough including political control. ● Ward and borough turnout data. MOTION CHART: This motion chart shows the relationship, between share of votes and seats won by the major parties in elections since 1964 at borough level (requires Adobe Flash Player). MAP: ) These interactive ward maps help to geographically present election results from 2006 and 2010 and display results for each candidate (requires Adobe Flash Player). Data for the elections in the three boroughs that directly elect a mayor (Newham, Lewisham and Hackney) are not included in the map but are included in the Excel spreadsheet of results.

  13. d

    Data from: City-scale car traffic and parking density maps from Uber...

    • dataone.org
    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    • +1more
    Updated Nov 22, 2023
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    Aryandoust, Arsam (2023). City-scale car traffic and parking density maps from Uber Movement travel time data [Dataset]. https://dataone.org/datasets/sha256%3A914faeb5899e2439437e72b931146d61e8bf1e0d9a3bb9e583b3c7dfde4ed9a8
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 22, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Aryandoust, Arsam
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2015 - Dec 31, 2018
    Description

    Aryandoust, A., van Vliet, O. & Patt, A. City-scale car traffic and parking density maps from Uber Movement travel time data. Scientific Data 6, 158 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-019-0159-6

  14. l

    Moving Traffic Enforcement - Enforcement Points - 2024 Validation photos...

    • data.leicester.gov.uk
    csv, excel, geojson +1
    Updated Jan 17, 2025
    + more versions
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    (2025). Moving Traffic Enforcement - Enforcement Points - 2024 Validation photos (including all bus lanes/gates, bus stop clear ways, school keep clear way and box junctions). [Dataset]. https://data.leicester.gov.uk/explore/dataset/bus-lane-enforcement-enforcement-points-2024/
    Explore at:
    csv, json, geojson, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 17, 2025
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Leicester City Council operates a bus lane enforcement scheme to improve public transport reliability, journey times and to encourage sustainable travel.Enforcement points are located at the following places that are enforced within Leicester city (24 hours a day, seven days a week)Lutterworth Road- Middleton Street (bus lane)A426 Lutterworth Road (Soar Valley Way and Marsden Lane) (bus lane)Humberstone Road (Forest Road) (bus lane)Duns Lane inbound and outbound (bus gate)Abbey Street (bus gate)Narborough Road (Fullhurst Avenue) (bus lane)London Road bus stop clearway (red route)London Road (bus lane) – hackney carriages are not permittedCharles Street southbound and northbound (bus gate)Causeway Lane (bus gate)Rutland Street (bus gate)Horsefair Street (bus gate)Thurcaston Road (bus gate)A50 Groby Road inbound (bus lane)Abbey Park Street northwest bound (bus lane)Abbey Park Street southeast bound (bus lane)Anstey Lane (bus lane)Melton Road (bus lane)Belgrave Gate (Bus stop clearway)Box JunctionsAbbey Street Jct of Gravel StreetVaughan Way Jct of Causeway LaneSchoolsSpinney Hill Primary School- Ventnor StreetHighfields Primary School-Stoughton StreetWest Gate/ Christ The King - Glenfield RoadCrown Hills Community College - Gwendolen RoadColeman Primary School - Gwendolen Road - CCTV Static CameraShaftesbury Junior - Latimer StreetBraunstone - Tatlow RoadAventi & St Paul's Catholic School -Spencefield Lane - CCTV Static CameraLinden Primary School - Headland RoadThis dataset contains a map of the enforcement point locations and linked files which provide photogrphic evidence of signage surrounding the enforcement points.If you wish to make a payment you can pay online or phone our automated payment line on 0116 454 1012. Alternatively email our office leicesterble@leicester.gov.uk with your name, address, contact telephone number and Penalty Charge Notice (PCN) reference number.We will contact you as soon as possible.

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GLA Intelligence Unit (2024). Focus on London - Population and Migration [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/focus-on-london-population-and-migration-1/embed

Focus on London - Population and Migration

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pdf, unknownAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Aug 25, 2024
Dataset authored and provided by
GLA Intelligence Unit
Area covered
London
Description

This report was released in September 2010. However, recent demographic data is available on the datastore - you may find other datasets on the Datastore useful such as: GLA Population Projections, National Insurance Number Registrations of Overseas Nationals, Births by Birthplace of Mother, Births and Fertility Rates, Office for National Statistics (ONS) Population Estimates

FOCUSONLONDON2010:POPULATIONANDMIGRATION

London is the United Kingdom’s only city region. Its population of 7.75 million is 12.5 per cent of the UK population living on just 0.6 per cent of the land area. London’s average population density is over 4,900 persons per square kilometre, this is ten times that of the second most densely populated region.

Between 2001 and 2009 London’s population grew by over 430 thousand, more than any other region, accounting for over 16 per cent of the UK increase.

This report discusses in detail the population of London including Population Age Structure, Fertility and Mortality, Internal Migration, International Migration, Population Turnover and Churn, and Demographic Projections.

Population and Migration report is the first release of the Focus on London 2010-12 series. Reports on themes such as Income, Poverty, Labour Market, Skills, Health, and Housing are also available.

REPORT:

Read the full report in PDF format.

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PRESENTATION:

To access an interactive presentation about population changes in London click the link to see it on Prezi.com

DATA:

To access a spreadsheet with all the data from the Population and Migration report click on the image below.

Report data

MAP:

To enter an interactive map showing a number of indicators discussed in the Population and Migration report click on the image below.

Interactive Maps

FACTS:

● Top five boroughs for babies born per 10,000 population in 2008-09:

  1. Newham – 244.4
  2. Barking and Dagenham – 209.3
  3. Hackney – 205.7
  4. Waltham Forest – 202.7
  5. Greenwich – 196.2

-32. Havering – 116.8

-33. City of London – 47.0

● In 2009, Barnet overtook Croydon as the most populous London borough. Prior to this Croydon had been the largest since 1966

● Population per hectare of land used for Domestic building and gardens is highest in Tower Hamlets

● In 2008-09, natural change (births minus deaths) led to 78,000 more Londoners compared with only 8,000 due to migration. read more about this or click play on the chart below to reveal how regional components of populations change have altered over time.

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