Data

Distribution and amenity of public open space across the Perth Metropolitan region: a local government perspective: POS Tool case study

The University of Western Australia
Professor Fiona Bull (Principal investigator, Aggregated by) Assistant Professor Bryan Boruff (Aggregated by) Research Associate Paula Hooper (Aggregated by)
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft.title=Distribution and amenity of public open space across the Perth Metropolitan region: a local government perspective: POS Tool case study&rft.identifier=uwa-ap12/collection-3&rft.publisher=The University of Western Australia&rft.description=This collection comprises a report developed from the analysis of data output from the POSTool and written by Paula Hooper, Bryan Boruff and Fiona Bull of the Centre for the Built Environment and Health, University of Western Australia. The report examined the spatial distribution of Public Open Space (POS) across the Perth Metropolitan Region (PMR) focusing specifically on parks, park type, park amenity, and park catchment by Local Government Area (LGA). Summary statistics were derived for each LGA in the PMR using the POS Tool and park and park amenity provision compared across the region. The report outlines the spatial disparities in the provision of parks and park amenity in Perth highlighting where certain LGA’s have underprovided for the citizens they represent. Furthermore, through the examination of park catchments and the population serviced by each park, the report identifies the percent of each LGA’s population which does not have easy access to parks in their neighborhood. The results of this report identify the varying range of park and park amenity provision across the PMR whilst providing an example of the robust analysis which can be conducted using results generated by the POS Tool.&rft.creator=Professor Fiona Bull&rft.date=2013&rft.coverage=Perth Metropolitan Region&rft_subject=Land Use and Environmental Planning&rft_subject=BUILT ENVIRONMENT AND DESIGN&rft_subject=URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING&rft_subject=Recreation, Leisure and Tourism Geography&rft_subject=STUDIES IN HUMAN SOCIETY&rft_subject=HUMAN GEOGRAPHY&rft_subject=Regional Analysis and Development&rft_subject=Geospatial Information Systems&rft_subject=ENGINEERING&rft_subject=GEOMATIC ENGINEERING&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Please use the contact information below to request access to this data.

Contact Information

www.postool.com.au

Access:

Other view details

The data used for this report is publically available and can be queried (per LGA) and downloaded using the POSTool (http://www.postool.com.au/cbeh/pos/home/).

Full description

This collection comprises a report developed from the analysis of data output from the POSTool and written by Paula Hooper, Bryan Boruff and Fiona Bull of the Centre for the Built Environment and Health, University of Western Australia. The report examined the spatial distribution of Public Open Space (POS) across the Perth Metropolitan Region (PMR) focusing specifically on parks, park type, park amenity, and park catchment by Local Government Area (LGA). Summary statistics were derived for each LGA in the PMR using the POS Tool and park and park amenity provision compared across the region.

The report outlines the spatial disparities in the provision of parks and park amenity in Perth highlighting where certain LGA’s have underprovided for the citizens they represent. Furthermore, through the examination of park catchments and the population serviced by each park, the report identifies the percent of each LGA’s population which does not have easy access to parks in their neighborhood. The results of this report identify the varying range of park and park amenity provision across the PMR whilst providing an example of the robust analysis which can be conducted using results generated by the POS Tool.

Notes

The report produced from this analysis will be publically available from the Centre for the Built Environment and Health (CBEH) and can be downloaded via their webpage (http://www.sph.uwa.edu.au/research/cbeh).

Created: 01 08 2013

Data time period: 12 06 2013 to 02 08 2013

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

Spatial Coverage And Location

text: Perth Metropolitan Region

Identifiers
  • Local : uwa-ap12/collection-3