100+ datasets found
  1. a

    Access Network Mapping (England)

    • naturalengland-defra.opendata.arcgis.com
    • data.catchmentbasedapproach.org
    • +3more
    Updated Dec 12, 2016
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    Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation (2016). Access Network Mapping (England) [Dataset]. https://naturalengland-defra.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/access-network-mapping-england
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 12, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation
    Area covered
    Description

    The Access Network Map of England is a national composite dataset of Access layers, showing analysis of extent of Access provision for each Lower Super Output Area (LSOA), as a percentage or area coverage of access in England. The ‘Access Network Map’ was developed by Natural England to inform its work to improve opportunities for people to enjoy the natural environment. This map shows, across England, the relative abundance of accessible land in relation to where people live. Due to issues explained below, the map does not, and cannot, provide a definitive statement of where intervention is necessary. Rather, it should be used to identify areas of interest which require further exploration. Natural England believes that places where people can enjoy the natural environment should be improved and created where they are most wanted. Access Network Maps help support this work by providing means to assess the amount of accessible land available in relation to where people live. They combine all the available good quality data on access provision into a single dataset and relate this to population. This provides a common foundation for regional and national teams to use when targeting resources to improve public access to greenspace, or projects that rely on this resource. The Access Network Maps are compiled from the datasets available to Natural England which contain robust, nationally consistent data on land and routes that are normally available to the public and are free of charge. Datasets contained in the aggregated data:•
    Agri-environment scheme permissive access (routes and open access)•
    CROW access land (including registered common land and Section 16)•
    Country Parks•
    Cycleways (Sustrans Routes) including Local/Regional/National and Link Routes•
    Doorstep Greens•
    Local Nature Reserves•
    Millennium Greens•
    National Nature Reserves (accessible sites only)•
    National Trails•
    Public Rights of Way•
    Forestry Commission ‘Woods for People’ data•
    Village Greens – point data only Due to the quantity and complexity of data used, it is not possible to display clearly on a single map the precise boundary of accessible land for all areas. We therefore selected a unit which would be clearly visible at a variety of scales and calculated the total area (in hectares) of accessible land in each. The units we selected are ‘Lower Super Output Areas’ (LSOAs), which represent where approximately 1,500 people live based on postcode. To calculate the total area of accessible land for each we gave the linear routes a notional width of 3 metres so they could be measured in hectares. We then combined together all the datasets and calculated the total hectares of accessible land in each LSOA. For further information about this data see the following links:Access Network Mapping GuidanceAccess Network Mapping Metadata Full metadata can be viewed on data.gov.uk.

  2. a

    Living England Habitat Map (Phase 4)

    • naturalengland-defra.opendata.arcgis.com
    • data.catchmentbasedapproach.org
    Updated Mar 23, 2022
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    Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation (2022). Living England Habitat Map (Phase 4) [Dataset]. https://naturalengland-defra.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/living-england-habitat-map-phase-4
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 23, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation
    Area covered
    Description

    PLEASE NOTE: This data product is not available in Shapefile format or KML at https://naturalengland-defra.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/Defra::living-england-habitat-map-phase-4/about, as the data exceeds the limits of these formats. Please select an alternative download format.This data product is also available for download in multiple formats via the Defra Data Services Platform at https://environment.data.gov.uk/explore/4aa716ce-f6af-454c-8ba2-833ebc1bde96?download=true.The Living England project, led by Natural England, is a multi-year programme delivering a satellite-derived national habitat layer in support of the Environmental Land Management (ELM) System and the Natural Capital and Ecosystem Assessment (NCEA) Pilot. The project uses a machine learning approach to image classification, developed under the Defra Living Maps project (SD1705 – Kilcoyne et al., 2017). The method first clusters homogeneous areas of habitat into segments, then assigns each segment to a defined list of habitat classes using Random Forest (a machine learning algorithm). The habitat probability map displays modelled likely broad habitat classifications, trained on field surveys and earth observation data from 2021 as well as historic data layers. This map is an output from Phase IV of the Living England project, with future work in Phase V (2022-23) intending to standardise the methodology and Phase VI (2023-24) to implement the agreed standardised methods.The Living England habitat probability map will provide high-accuracy, spatially consistent data for a range of Defra policy delivery needs (e.g. 25YEP indicators and Environment Bill target reporting Natural capital accounting, Nature Strategy, ELM) as well as external users. As a probability map, it allows the extrapolation of data to areas that we do not have data. These data will also support better local and national decision making, policy development and evaluation, especially in areas where other forms of evidence are unavailable. Process Description: A number of data layers are used to inform the model to provide a habitat probability map of England. The main sources layers are Sentinel-2 and Sentinel-1 satellite data from the ESA Copericus programme. Additional datasets were incorporated into the model (as detailed below) to aid the segmentation and classification of specific habitat classes. Datasets used:Agri-Environment Higher Level Stewardship (HLS) Monitoring, British Geological Survey Bedrock Mapping 1:50k, Coastal Dune Geomatics Mapping Ground Truthing, Crop Map of England (RPA), Dark Peak Bog State Survey, Desktop Validation and Manual Points, EA Integrated Height Model 10m, EA Saltmarsh Zonation and Extent, Field Unit NEFU, Living England Collector App NEFU/EES, Long Term Monitoring Network (LTMN), Lowland Heathland Survey, National Forest Inventory (NFI), National Grassland Survey, National Plant Monitoring Scheme, NEFU Surveys, Northumberland Border Mires, OS Vector Map District , Priority Habitats Inventory (PHI) B Button, European Space Agency (ESA) Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 , Space2 Eye Lens: Ainsdale NNR, Space2 Eye Lens: State of the Bog Bowland Survey, Space2 Eye Lens: State of the Bog Dark Peak Condition Survey, Space2 Eye Lens: State of the Bog (MMU) Mountain Hare Habitat Survey Dark Peak, Uplands Inventory, West Pennines Designation NVC Survey, Wetland Inventories, WorldClim - Global Climate DataFull metadata can be viewed on data.gov.uk.

  3. d

    England Peat Map

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    zip
    Updated May 5, 2025
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    Natural England (2025). England Peat Map [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/3c72669a-1331-4930-a12d-b4f8032aa5cd
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 5, 2025
    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

    Area covered
    England
    Description

    The England Peat Map is a map of England's peaty soils. It models the extent, depth, and condition of our peat including vegetation and upland peat erosion & drainage features (grips, gullies, bare peat and peat hagging). See NERR149 England Peat Map Final Report, Natural England, 2025.

    The map and, where possible, the associated data, are available openly and free to use for any purpose. This map is funded by the Nature for Climate Fund and the Natural Capital and Ecosystem Assessment (NCEA) programme, both part of the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).

  4. d

    Living England Habitat Map (Phase 4)

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    Updated Mar 31, 2022
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    Natural England (2022). Living England Habitat Map (Phase 4) [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/4aa716ce-f6af-454c-8ba2-833ebc1bde96
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 31, 2022
    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

    The Living England project, led by Natural England, is a multi-year programme delivering a satellite-derived national habitat layer in support of the Environmental Land Management (ELM) System and the Natural Capital and Ecosystem Assessment (NCEA) Pilot. The project uses a machine learning approach to image classification, developed under the Defra Living Maps project (SD1705 – Kilcoyne et al., 2017). The method first clusters homogeneous areas of habitat into segments, then assigns each segment to a defined list of habitat classes using Random Forest (a machine learning algorithm). The habitat probability map displays modelled likely broad habitat classifications, trained on field surveys and earth observation data from 2021 as well as historic data layers. This map is an output from Phase IV of the Living England project, with future work in Phase V (2022-23) intending to standardise the methodology and Phase VI (2023-24) to implement the agreed standardised methods.

    The Living England habitat probability map will provide high-accuracy, spatially consistent data for a range of Defra policy delivery needs (e.g. 25YEP indicators and Environment Bill target reporting Natural capital accounting, Nature Strategy, ELM) as well as external users. As a probability map, it allows the extrapolation of data to areas that we do not have data. These data will also support better local and national decision making, policy development and evaluation, especially in areas where other forms of evidence are unavailable.

    Process Description: A number of data layers are used to inform the model to provide a habitat probability map of England. The main sources layers are Sentinel-2 and Sentinel-1 satellite data from the ESA Copericus programme. Additional datasets were incorporated into the model (as detailed below) to aid the segmentation and classification of specific habitat classes.

    Datasets used: Agri-Environment Higher Level Stewardship (HLS) Monitoring, British Geological Survey Bedrock Mapping 1:50k, Coastal Dune Geomatics Mapping Ground Truthing, Crop Map of England (RPA), Dark Peak Bog State Survey, Desktop Validation and Manual Points, EA Integrated Height Model 10m, EA Saltmarsh Zonation and Extent, Field Unit NEFU, Living England Collector App NEFU/EES, Long Term Monitoring Network (LTMN), Lowland Heathland Survey, National Forest Inventory (NFI), National Grassland Survey, National Plant Monitoring Scheme, NEFU Surveys, Northumberland Border Mires, OS Vector Map District , Priority Habitats Inventory (PHI) B Button, European Space Agency (ESA) Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 , Space2 Eye Lens: Ainsdale NNR, Space2 Eye Lens: State of the Bog Bowland Survey, Space2 Eye Lens: State of the Bog Dark Peak Condition Survey, Space2 Eye Lens: State of the Bog (MMU) Mountain Hare Habitat Survey Dark Peak, Uplands Inventory, West Pennines Designation NVC Survey, Wetland Inventories, WorldClim - Global Climate Data

  5. p

    Map Stores in United Kingdom - 115 Verified Listings Database

    • poidata.io
    csv, excel, json
    Updated Jul 2, 2025
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    Poidata.io (2025). Map Stores in United Kingdom - 115 Verified Listings Database [Dataset]. https://www.poidata.io/report/map-store/united-kingdom
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    csv, excel, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 2, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Poidata.io
    Area covered
    United Kingdom
    Description

    Comprehensive dataset of 115 Map stores in United Kingdom as of July, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.

  6. a

    Extent of Peatlands in England

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • data.catchmentbasedapproach.org
    Updated Apr 27, 2020
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    The Rivers Trust (2020). Extent of Peatlands in England [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/294240636b094b25808ad3eb417e9b7f
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 27, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The Rivers Trust
    Area covered
    Description

    Using a range of different data sources Natural England has collated a map showing the extent of peatlands in England. For the purposes of this project, peatlands have been classified into three types based on the source of the information but assumed to have the following general characteristics:■ Deep peaty soils: Areas covered with a majority of peat >40cm deep.■ Shallow peaty soils: Areas with a majority of soils with peat 10–40cm deep.■ Soils with peaty pockets: Areas of mostly non-peat soils, supporting smaller pockets of deep peat (such as flushes or exposures of buried peat) too small to map at a national scale.Reported in Natural England's publication England's Peatland - carbon storage and greenhouse gases (NE257).We have have shared this data with permission from Natural England. You can request a download of the full dataset from enquiries@naturalengland.org.uk. It is available free of charge for non-commercial purposes. If you want to use the data for a Commercial purpose you must obtain a licence from Natural England.

  7. d

    Crop Map of England (CROME) 2019

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    • gimi9.com
    • +1more
    Updated Nov 19, 2019
    + more versions
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    Rural Payments Agency (2019). Crop Map of England (CROME) 2019 [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/b498a2be-f3de-49fb-91a4-3381bb3868c2
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 19, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Rural Payments Agency
    Area covered
    England
    Description

    The Crop Map of England (CROME) is a polygon vector dataset mainly containing the crop types of England. The dataset contains approximately 32 million hexagonal cells classifying England into over 20 main crop types, grassland, and non-agricultural land covers, such as Woodland, Water Bodies, Fallow Land and other non-agricultural land covers. The classification was created automatically using supervised classification (Random Forest Classification) from the combination of Sentinel-1 Radar and Sentinel-2 Optical Satellite images during the period late January 2019 – September 2019. The dataset was created to aid the classification of crop types from optical imagery, which can be affected by cloud cover. The results were checked against survey data collected by field inspectors and visually validated. The data has been split into the Ordnance Survey Ceremonial Counties and each county is given a three letter code. Please refer to the CROME specification document to see which county each CODE label represents.

  8. Maps of rural areas in England (Census 2001)

    • gov.uk
    Updated Jul 11, 2011
    + more versions
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    Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (2011). Maps of rural areas in England (Census 2001) [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/maps-of-rural-areas-in-england
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 11, 2011
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs
    Area covered
    England
    Description

    Maps of rural areas in England (Census 2001).

    Defra statistics: rural

    Email mailto:rural.statistics@defra.gov.uk">rural.statistics@defra.gov.uk

    <p class="govuk-body">You can also contact us via Twitter: <a href="https://twitter.com/DefraStats" class="govuk-link">https://twitter.com/DefraStats</a></p>
    

  9. a

    Summarised Botanical Value Map 2022 (England)

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • data.catchmentbasedapproach.org
    • +1more
    Updated Jun 19, 2023
    + more versions
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    Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation (2023). Summarised Botanical Value Map 2022 (England) [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/Defra::summarised-botanical-value-map-2022-england
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 19, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation
    Area covered
    Description

    Under the Natural Capital and Ecosystem Assessment (NCEA) Pilot, Natural England and the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland (BSBI) have been working in partnership to use BSBI's vast database of plant records to inform the evidence base for tree-planting activities. Poorly targeted tree planting risks damaging wildlife and carbon-rich habitats, therefore using these data we aim to ensure that areas of high conservation value are preserved in the landscape. The summarised botanical value map provides an easily interpretable output which categorises monads (1 x 1 km grid squares) as being of Low, Moderate or High botanical value according to the presence of Rare, Scarce and Threatened (RST) plant species and/or the proportion of Priority Habitat Positive Indicator (PHPI) species that were recorded within the 1 x 1 km grid square between 1970 and 2022. The PHPI species are a combination of BSBI axiophytes, positive indicators for common standards monitoring and ancient woodland indicators. The dataset includes an overall botanical value, as well as values based on only the presence of RST plant species, and a value for each broad habitat type based on the PHPI species records. By viewing the different attributes, you can gain insights into how valuable a monad is for different habitat types and for plant species of conservation concern, as well as an indication of how well a particular monad has been surveyed. The categories of 'No indicators, poor survey coverage' and 'No indicators, good survey coverage' indicate where no indicator species have been recorded and survey coverage either is above or below a threshold of 3 'recorder days'. A 'recorder day' is defined as being when 40 or more species have been recorded on a single visit and 3 recorder days is assumed sufficient to achieve good survey coverage within a 1 x 1 km grid square. This map is not intended to be used to carry out detailed assessments of individual site suitability for tree planting, for which the RST plant species heatmap at 100 x 100 m resolution and the PHPI heatmaps at 1 x 1 km resolution have been developed by BSBI and Natural England. However, the summarised botanical value map can provide useful insights at a strategic landscape scale, to highlight monads of high value for vascular plants and inform spatial planning and prioritisation, and other land management decision-making. These should be used alongside other environmental datasets and local knowledge to ensure decisions are supported by the appropriate evidence. Please get in contact if you have any queries about the data or appropriate uses at botanicalheatmaps@naturalengland.org.uk.Datasets used:BSBI botanical heatmap data - BSBIOS Grids - OSONS Country boundaries - ONSCommon Standards Monitoring guidance - JNCC 2004BSBI's Axiophyte list - Walker 2018Ancient Woodland Indicators - Glaves et al. 2009Plantatt - Hill et al. 2004Further information can be found in the technical report at:Botanical Heatmaps and the Botanical Value Map: Technical Report (NERR110)Full metadata can be viewed on data.gov.uk.

  10. d

    Moorland Change Map (England)

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    Updated Nov 1, 2023
    + more versions
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    Natural England (2023). Moorland Change Map (England) [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/ee87630b-8810-4021-b493-036f29684983
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 1, 2023
    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

    Area covered
    England
    Description

    The Moorland Change Map (MCM) is a vector dataset which shows whether the uplands monitored contain change during the period of monitoring (Approximately the moorland burning season of Oct to Apr. The MCM is an earth observation derived product, using the Sentinel-2 satellites Validation of the the results happens for each year per upland and Nationally. The validation shows the accuracy of the MCM results and are available in the associated Excel spreadsheet.

  11. Historic Flood Map

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    • data.catchmentbasedapproach.org
    Updated Feb 6, 2025
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    Environment Agency (2025). Historic Flood Map [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/889885c0-d465-11e4-9507-f0def148f590
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 6, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Environment Agencyhttps://www.gov.uk/ea
    License

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

    Description

    The Historic Flood Map is a GIS layer showing the maximum extent of individual Recorded Flood Outlines from river, the sea and groundwater springs that meet a set criteria. It shows areas of land that have previously been subject to flooding in England. This excludes flooding from surface water, except in areas where it is impossible to determine whether the source is fluvial or surface water but the dominant source is fluvial.

    The majority of records began in 1946 when predecessor bodies to the Environment Agency started collecting detailed information about flooding incidents, although we hold limited details about flooding incidents prior to this date.

    If an area is not covered by the Historic Flood Map it does not mean that the area has never flooded, only that we do not currently have records of flooding in this area that meet the criteria for inclusion. It is also possible that the pattern of flooding in this area has changed and that this area would now flood or not flood under different circumstances. Outlines that don’t meet this criteria are stored in the Recorded Flood Outlines dataset.

    The Historic Flood Map takes into account the presence of defences, structures, and other infrastructure where they existed at the time of flooding. It will include flood extents that may have been affected by overtopping, breaches or blockages.

    Flooding is shown to the land and does not necessarily indicate that properties were flooded internally.

  12. d

    Crop Map of England (CROME) 2022

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    Updated Sep 22, 2023
    + more versions
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    Rural Payments Agency (2023). Crop Map of England (CROME) 2022 [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/cc389fe9-f026-4b20-a80f-f424ee833ea6
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 22, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Rural Payments Agency
    License

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

    Area covered
    England
    Description

    The Crop Map of England (CROME) is a polygon vector dataset mainly containing the crop types of England. The dataset contains approximately 32 million hexagonal cells classifying England into over 15 main crop types, grassland, and non-agricultural land covers, such as Woodland, Water Bodies, Fallow Land and other non-agricultural land covers. The classification was created automatically using supervised classification (Random Forest Classification) from the combination of Sentinel-1 Radar and Sentinel-2 Optical Satellite images during the period late October 2021 – September 2022. The dataset was created to aid the classification of crop types from optical imagery, which can be affected by cloud cover. The results were checked against survey data collected by field inspectors and visually validated. The data has been split into the Ordnance Survey Ceremonial Counties and each county is given a three letter code. Please refer to the CROME specification document to see which county each CODE label represents.

  13. E

    UK gridded population at 1 km resolution for 2021 based on Census 2021/2022...

    • catalogue.ceh.ac.uk
    • hosted-metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    • +2more
    zip
    Updated Feb 26, 2025
    + more versions
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    E. Carnell; S.J. Tomlinson; S. Reis (2025). UK gridded population at 1 km resolution for 2021 based on Census 2021/2022 and Land Cover Map 2021 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5285/7beefde9-c520-4ddf-897a-0167e8918595
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 26, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre
    Authors
    E. Carnell; S.J. Tomlinson; S. Reis
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2021 - Dec 31, 2022
    Area covered
    Dataset funded by
    Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs
    Description

    This dataset contains gridded human population with a spatial resolution of 1 km x 1 km for the UK based on Census 2021 (Census 2022 for Scotland) and Land Cover Map 2021 input data. Data on population distribution for the United Kingdom is available from statistical offices in England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland and provided to the public e.g. via the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Population data is typically provided in tabular form or, based on a range of different geographical units, in file types for geographical information systems (GIS), for instance as ESRI Shapefiles. The geographical units reflect administrative boundaries at different levels of detail, from Devolved Administration to Output Areas (OA), wards or intermediate geographies. While the presentation of data on the level of these geographical units is useful for statistical purposes, accounting for spatial variability for instance of environmental determinants of public health requires a more spatially homogeneous population distribution. For this purpose, the dataset presented here combines 2021/2022 UK Census population data on Output Area level with Land Cover Map 2021 land-use classes 'urban' and 'suburban' to create a consistent and comprehensive gridded population data product at 1 km x 1 km spatial resolution. The mapping product is based on British National Grid (OSGB36 datum).

  14. Statutory Main River Map

    • environment.data.gov.uk
    Updated Jan 11, 2023
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    Environment Agency (2023). Statutory Main River Map [Dataset]. https://environment.data.gov.uk/dataset/25dde009-ba7d-40de-8380-c5c3bb32ccdc
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 11, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Environment Agencyhttps://www.gov.uk/ea
    License

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

    Description

    Statutory Main Rivers Map is a spatial (polyline) dataset that defines statutory watercourses in England designated as Main Rivers by the Environment Agency.

    Watercourses designated as ‘main river’ are generally the larger arterial watercourses. The Environment Agency has permissive powers, but not a duty, to carry out maintenance, improvement or construction work on designated main rivers.

    All other open water courses in England are determined by statute as an ‘ordinary watercourse’. On these watercourses the Lead Local flood Authority or, if within an Internal Drainage District, the Internal Drainage Board have similar permissive powers to maintain and improve.

  15. Marine Maps and Charts Archive (1960 onwards)

    • data-search.nerc.ac.uk
    • metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    • +2more
    cfc
    Updated Oct 27, 2014
    + more versions
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    British Geological Survey (2014). Marine Maps and Charts Archive (1960 onwards) [Dataset]. https://data-search.nerc.ac.uk/geonetwork/srv/api/records/c35e3405-9db1-6d8b-e044-0003ba9b0d98
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    cfcAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 27, 2014
    Dataset provided by
    British Geological Surveyhttps://www.bgs.ac.uk/
    License

    http://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/INSPIRE_Directive_Article13_1dhttp://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/INSPIRE_Directive_Article13_1d

    Time period covered
    1960
    Area covered
    Description

    The Marine Maps and Chart Archive held by BGS contains maps created by BGS (the majority of which result from BGS offshore mapping projects) and also maps acquired from various other sources (e.g. UK Hydrographic Office and MCA Civil Hydrography Programme survey charts). The maps which date from the 1960s onwards are very variable in subject type and scale ranging from survey navigation to geological interpretation. The maps are primarily for the UKCS (United Kingdom Continental Shelf). The coverage of some map types is the entire UKCS whilst other have only regional or localised extent. The maps which are a mix of paper and digital are applicable to a wide range of uses including environmental, geotechnical, geophysical and geological studies. range of uses including environmental, geotechnical, geophysical and geological studies. Scanned maps can be viewed via the BGS maps portal http://www.bgs.ac.uk/data/maps.

  16. s

    Counties and Unitary Authorities (April 2023) Map in the UK

    • geoportal.statistics.gov.uk
    Updated May 31, 2023
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    Office for National Statistics (2023). Counties and Unitary Authorities (April 2023) Map in the UK [Dataset]. https://geoportal.statistics.gov.uk/documents/1aa806eb35ee4334a87f5970c82e3ac0
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Office for National Statistics
    License

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licenceshttps://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences

    Area covered
    Description

    A PDF map that shows the counties and unitary authorities in the United Kingdom as at 1 April 2023. (File Size - 583 KB)

  17. Road conditions in England to March 2020 and March 2021

    • gov.uk
    Updated Nov 10, 2021
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    Department for Transport (2021). Road conditions in England to March 2020 and March 2021 [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/road-conditions-in-england-to-march-2020-and-march-2021
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 10, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    Department for Transport
    Area covered
    England
    Description

    Information on the condition of roads in England, as well as other aspects of highways maintenance in the years to March 2020 and March 2021.

    The data comes from multiple sources including National Highways (formerly Highways England) and local authorities. Some data from local authorities form part of the Single Data List, making the provision of data a mandatory requirement.

    In the period ending March 2021, local authorities in England reported that:

    • 4% of their ‘A’ road network
    • 6% of their ‘B’ and ‘C’ road network
    • 17% of their unclassified road network

    were categorised as red (should have been considered for maintenance).

    Of the roads managed by National Highways:

    • 4% of motorways
    • 7% of ‘A’ roads

    should have been considered for maintenance in period ending March 2021.

    Local authorities provided data on a voluntary basis for their amber and green roads for the financial years ending 2020 and 2021. This information was published for ‘A’ roads for the first time in the 2019 release. Where local authorities have provided this information for 2019 to 2020 and 2020 to 2021, this has been included for ‘A’ roads alongside experimental statistics for ‘B’ and ‘C’ roads.

    The statistical release does not present maintenance expenditure statistics for 2020 to 2021. This is because the source data for local roads had not been published at the point of production of this release. We are planning to publish an update of maintenance expenditure information alongside ‘Transport Statistics Great Britain 2021’.

    Alongside these official statistics, new experimental statistics have also been published in ‘Experimental Statistics: Local Road Condition SCANNER data report, April 2017 to March 2021’, April 2017 to March 2021. This uses the underlying SCANNER data from local authorities to provide more granular analysis of road condition.

    An new https://maps.dft.gov.uk/road-condition-explorer/index.html" class="govuk-link">interactive map has been published alongside this release. It presents information at road level on the condition of local authority managed classified (‘A’ roads, ‘B’ and ‘C’ roads), by condition category. This covers 2 time periods with data shown on the map for specific LAs, where this was available, in 2017 to 2019 and 2019 to 2021 respectively.

    Contact us

    Road condition statistics

    Email mailto:roadmaintenance.stats@dft.gov.uk">roadmaintenance.stats@dft.gov.uk

    Media enquiries 0300 7777 878

  18. b

    Boundaries - Regions (2024) - England

    • cityobservatory.birmingham.gov.uk
    csv, excel, geojson +1
    Updated Feb 13, 2025
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    (2025). Boundaries - Regions (2024) - England [Dataset]. https://cityobservatory.birmingham.gov.uk/explore/dataset/boundaries-regions-2024-england/
    Explore at:
    geojson, csv, excel, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 13, 2025
    License

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

    Area covered
    England
    Description

    This file contains the digital vector boundaries for Regions in England as at December 2024.

    The boundaries available are: Generalised Clipped (BGC) - Generalised to 20m and clipped to the coastline (Mean High Water mark) and more generalised than the BFE boundaries.

    Contains both Ordnance Survey and ONS Intellectual Property Rights.TopoJSON Shapefile for Power BIOn the Export tab you will find a file under the Alternative exports. This file is in TopoJSON format and is ready for use in compatible visualisation tools such as Power BI or Mapbox.

  19. Output Areas (December 2011) Map - East of England Region

    • cloud.csiss.gmu.edu
    • geoportal.statistics.gov.uk
    • +1more
    html, pdf
    Updated Dec 24, 2019
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    Office for National Statistics (2019). Output Areas (December 2011) Map - East of England Region [Dataset]. https://cloud.csiss.gmu.edu/uddi/dataset/output-areas-december-2011-map-east-of-england-region4
    Explore at:
    pdf, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 24, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    Office for National Statisticshttp://www.ons.gov.uk/
    License

    http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence

    Area covered
    East of England, England
    Description

    A PDF map showing the output areas in the East of England Region of England as at December 2011. (File Size - 28 MB)

  20. 1940-1947 Bartholomew historic map

    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 26, 2018
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    Esri UK Education (2018). 1940-1947 Bartholomew historic map [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/e3c4fc1d30fc4a76b5e047169a8991d0
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 26, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    Esri UK Education
    Area covered
    Description

    Colourful and easy to use, Bartholomew’s maps became a trademark series. The maps were popular and influential, especially for recreation, and the series sold well, particularly with cyclists and tourists. To begin with, Bartholomew printed their half-inch maps in Scotland as stand-alone sheets known as 'District Sheets' and by 1886 the whole of Scotland was covered. They then revised the maps into an ordered set of 29 sheets covering Scotland in a regular format. This was first published under the title Bartholomew’s Reduced Ordnance Survey of Scotland. The half-inch maps of Scotland formed the principal content for Bartholomew's Survey Atlas of Scotland published in 1895. Bartholomew then moved south of the Border to the more lucrative but competitive market in England and Wales, whilst continuing to revise the Scottish sheets. This Bartholomew series at half-inch to the mile, covered Great Britain in 62 sheets in the 1940s, Bartholomew’s first to cover Great Britain at this scale (their previous series covering Scotland and then England and Wales). The series provides an attractive and useful snapshot of 1940s Britain. By this time, Bartholomew had altered the range of information on their maps compared to the 1900s. There were more categories of roads, Ministry of Transport road numbers were added, and new recreational features such as Youth Hostels and Golf Courses. Bartholomew’s topographic information was gathered partly from original Ordnance Survey maps, and partly from information sent in to Bartholomew from map users. One important user community for Bartholomew were cyclists. From the 1890s, Bartholomew entered into a formal relationship with the Cyclists’ Touring Club, then numbering around 60,500 cyclists, proposing that club members supplied Bartholomew with up-to-date information. In return, Bartholomew provided the CTC with discounted half-inch maps. The relationship worked very well, turning CTC members into an unofficial surveying army, feeding back reliable and accurate topographical information which Bartholomew would then use to update their maps. You can read more about this and see selected letters from cyclists at: http://digital.nls.uk/bartholomew/duncan-street-explorer/cyclists-touring-club.html.

    Usually Bartholomew made revisions the sheets right up to the time of publication, so the date of publication is the best guide to the approximate date of the features shown on the map. You can view the dates of publication for the series at: https://maps.nls.uk/series/bart_half_great_britain.html

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Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation (2016). Access Network Mapping (England) [Dataset]. https://naturalengland-defra.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/access-network-mapping-england

Access Network Mapping (England)

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Dataset updated
Dec 12, 2016
Dataset authored and provided by
Defra group ArcGIS Online organisation
Area covered
Description

The Access Network Map of England is a national composite dataset of Access layers, showing analysis of extent of Access provision for each Lower Super Output Area (LSOA), as a percentage or area coverage of access in England. The ‘Access Network Map’ was developed by Natural England to inform its work to improve opportunities for people to enjoy the natural environment. This map shows, across England, the relative abundance of accessible land in relation to where people live. Due to issues explained below, the map does not, and cannot, provide a definitive statement of where intervention is necessary. Rather, it should be used to identify areas of interest which require further exploration. Natural England believes that places where people can enjoy the natural environment should be improved and created where they are most wanted. Access Network Maps help support this work by providing means to assess the amount of accessible land available in relation to where people live. They combine all the available good quality data on access provision into a single dataset and relate this to population. This provides a common foundation for regional and national teams to use when targeting resources to improve public access to greenspace, or projects that rely on this resource. The Access Network Maps are compiled from the datasets available to Natural England which contain robust, nationally consistent data on land and routes that are normally available to the public and are free of charge. Datasets contained in the aggregated data:•
Agri-environment scheme permissive access (routes and open access)•
CROW access land (including registered common land and Section 16)•
Country Parks•
Cycleways (Sustrans Routes) including Local/Regional/National and Link Routes•
Doorstep Greens•
Local Nature Reserves•
Millennium Greens•
National Nature Reserves (accessible sites only)•
National Trails•
Public Rights of Way•
Forestry Commission ‘Woods for People’ data•
Village Greens – point data only Due to the quantity and complexity of data used, it is not possible to display clearly on a single map the precise boundary of accessible land for all areas. We therefore selected a unit which would be clearly visible at a variety of scales and calculated the total area (in hectares) of accessible land in each. The units we selected are ‘Lower Super Output Areas’ (LSOAs), which represent where approximately 1,500 people live based on postcode. To calculate the total area of accessible land for each we gave the linear routes a notional width of 3 metres so they could be measured in hectares. We then combined together all the datasets and calculated the total hectares of accessible land in each LSOA. For further information about this data see the following links:Access Network Mapping GuidanceAccess Network Mapping Metadata Full metadata can be viewed on data.gov.uk.

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