Nottingham Urban Area

Summary

The Nottingham Built-up Area (BUA), Nottingham Urban Area, or Greater Nottingham is an area of land defined by the Office for National Statistics as which is built upon, with nearby areas linked if within 200 metres.[1][2] It consists of the city of Nottingham and the adjoining urban areas of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, in the East Midlands of England. It had a total population of 729,977 at the time of the 2011 census.[3] This was an increase of almost 10% since the 2001 census recorded population of 666,358,[4] due to population increases, reductions and several new sub-divisions.

Nottingham built-up area subdivisions, 2011
  Nottingham subdivision
  Other subdivisions
  Districts
  County boundary

Geography edit

Notable Settlements of Nottingham Urban Area
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Notable settlements of Nottingham Urban Area

Landmarks from top left to bottom right:

  1. Nottingham City Skyline
  2. Town Hall, Beeston
  3. Musters Road, West Bridgford
  4. St Mary's Church, Ilkeston
  5. Arnold Town Centre
  6. St Lawrence's Church, Heanor
  7. St Mary's Church, Clifton
  8. Market Square, Ripley
  9. Rows of housing in Long Eaton
  10. St Peter's Church, Ruddington

Greater Nottingham is largely within the three districts of Rushcliffe, Broxtowe and Gedling surrounding the city, though the area spills into the Nottinghamshire district of Ashfield, and also to the Amber Valley and Erewash districts of Derbyshire. The Nottingham Urban Area is, by the ONS' figures, the 8th largest in England (9th in the UK), with a population size between that of the Tyneside and Sheffield built-up areas, and a total area of 68.1 square miles (176 km2).[5]

The Nottingham Urban Area is bounded to the west by a narrow gap between Draycott (to the west of the Breaston urban area sub-division) and Borrowash (to the east of the Derby Urban Area). The Heanor/Ripley and West Hallam north-western extensions have a somewhat tenuous linkage through to the core of Nottingham City largely due to ribbon development, and are in close proximity to other nearby urban areas which together, almost link to Derby from the north.[6]

Sub-divisions do not always match administrative geographic boundaries; the subdivision of Clifton for example is within the Nottingham Unitary Authority city area but is subdivided by the River Trent. The Nottingham subdivision oversteps the city's borders at several locations. Together, these two subdivisions exceed the official city population (305,680 in 2011[7]) as a result, even though West Bridgford includes the counts of city suburbs Silverdale and Wilford.[8]

In the 1991 census,[9] Ilkeston was considered outside of the Nottingham Urban Area,[10] and its addition gave the BUA an 8% increase in 2001. This was due to improvements in mapping methodology by the ONS, and is chiefly responsible for the increase in sub-divisions over censuses rather than any large scale 'bricks and mortar' building,[11] as much of the area between the cities is protected green belt and wedges, restricting actual development.[6]

Urban subdivision Population District County
1981 census 1991 census 2001 census 2011 census
Nottingham 273,300 270,222 249,584 289,301 City of Nottingham Nottinghamshire
Beeston 64,785 66,626 66,683 51,479 Broxtowe Nottinghamshire
Carlton 46,053 47,302 48,493 49,235 Gedling Nottinghamshire
West Bridgford 27,463 33,843 43,395 45,509 Rushcliffe Nottinghamshire
Ilkeston 37,270 38,640 Erewash Derbyshire
Arnold 37,721 37,646 37,402 37,768 Gedling Nottinghamshire
Long Eaton 42,285 44,826 46,490 37,760 Erewash Derbyshire
Hucknall 27,463 29,160 29,188 32,107 Ashfield Nottinghamshire
Heanor 21,863 22,180 22,620 25,644 Amber Valley Derbyshire
Clifton 22,312 22,407 City of Nottingham Nottinghamshire
Ripley 17,548 18,310 18,523 19,315 Amber Valley Derbyshire
Eastwood 18,085 19,363 18,612 18,422 Broxtowe Nottinghamshire
Stapleford 16,190 Broxtowe Nottinghamshire
Kimberley 9,818 10,488 11,027 11,353 Broxtowe Nottinghamshire
Sandiacre 9,600 Erewash Derbyshire
Breaston 7,284 7,305 7,545 Erewash Derbyshire
Ruddington 6,504 6,476 6,264 7,020 Rushcliffe Nottinghamshire
West Hallam 6,016 Erewash Derbyshire
Awsworth 2,517 Broxtowe Nottinghamshire
Trowell 1,013 953 Broxtowe Nottinghamshire
Stanton-By-Dale 505 Erewash Derbyshire
Denby Common 495 Amber Valley Derbyshire
Ruddington Grange 177 196 Rushcliffe Nottinghamshire
Total 593,768 613,726 666,358 729,977
Change - +3.36% +8.58% +9.55%
Notes:
  • Awsworth, Breaston, Denby Common, Ilkeston, Ruddington Grange and West Hallam were independent areas until their inclusion in the table.
  • Total of 1981 subdivision figures is 592,888, an additional 880 residents are unaccounted for in the census report[12] total.
  • Up to the 2001 census, the Beeston subdivision included Stapleford and was named Beeston And Stapleford.
  • Up to the 2001 census, Sandiacre was included as part of the Long Eaton subdivision.
  • Up to the 1991 census, the Nottingham subdivision included Clifton.
  • In the 2001 census, Stanton-By-Dale was included as part of the Ilkeston subdivision.

Greater Nottingham Partnership/D2N2 edit

The local authorities collaborate in some ways. The Greater Nottingham Partnership considered Greater Nottingham to consist of the City of Nottingham plus the entirety of the Rushcliffe, Broxtowe and Gedling boroughs, along with Hucknall from Ashfield, but no part of Derbyshire, as no Derbyshire council was a member of the Partnership. They together worked as an advisory and lobbying body for projects and decisions involving the region. However it was axed due to funding in 2011 and the D2N2 Local Enterprise Partnership is instead assuming those functions with cross-county political and local business support.[13]

Nottingham-Derby metropolitan area edit

 
Built-up area boundaries in 2011 showing Nottingham and Derby, with near convergence of surrounding major BUAs:
  Nottingham
  Derby
  Alfreton/South Normanton
  Belper

The conurbation forms a large part of the Nottingham-Derby metropolitan area, which has an estimated population of 1.5 million.[14] The urban areas of both Derby and Nottingham are almost continuous with Draycott (part of the Breaston Urban sub-division) being almost continuous with the Borrowash part of the Derby Urban Area.[15] The Mansfield Urban Area also forms part of this metropolitan area, although it is not continuous with the Nottingham Urban Area. However, it is almost continuous with the Alfreton/South Normanton Built-up area, which had a population of 41,289 according to the last census,[15] with the South Normanton/Pinxton Urban sub-division of the Alfreton Urban Area being almost continuous with the Sutton-in-Ashfield Urban sub-division of the Mansfield Urban Area. The Alfreton Urban Area is also nearly continuous with Ripley part of the Nottingham Urban Area. Other minor urban areas to the west of the Ripley, Heanor and West Hallam sub divisions daisy-chain towards Derby from the north, notably Belper, Kilburn and Crich/Heage. See the maps above for a demonstration of these BUAs in close proximity.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "ONS 2011 Built-up Areas - Methodology and Guidance" (PDF). www.ons.gov.uk.
  2. ^ "Census 2001: Key Statistics for urban areas in England and Wales" (PDF). webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 5 January 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ "2011 Census – Built-up areas". ONS. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  4. ^ "Home - Office for National Statistics". www.statistics.gov.uk.
  5. ^ "ONS Geography Linked Data - Nottingham BUA". statistics.data.gov.uk.
  6. ^ a b "Technical Assessment of the Derby Principal Urban Area Green Belt Purposes" (PDF). www.south-derbys.gov.uk. September 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  7. ^ "Insight web family - The people of Nottinghamshire (2015)". jsna.nottinghamcity.gov.uk.
  8. ^ "ONS Geography Linked Data - West Bridgford BUASD". statistics.data.gov.uk.
  9. ^ "National Statistics Online - Census 2001". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 18 July 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  10. ^ "Home - Office for National Statistics". www.statistics.gov.uk.
  11. ^ "The UK's major urban areas" (PDF). www.ons.gov.uk. ONS. The identification of small urban areas in the 1991 Census was less precise than in the 2001 Census. The biggest difference in method is that the distance for merger of areas of urban land increased from 50 to 200 metres
  12. ^ Censuses, Office of Population; Surveys (1984). Census 1981 : key statistics for urban areas : the Midlands, cities and towns - Table 1. London: H.M.S.O. ISBN 0116910623.
  13. ^ "City's regeneration body the Greater Nottingham Partnership set to be axed". Nottingham Post. 14 July 2010. Archived from the original on 5 November 2014.
  14. ^ "British urban pattern: population data" (PDF). ESPON project 1.4.3 Study on Urban Functions. European Spatial Planning Observation Network. March 2007. p. 119. Archived from the original (pdf) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2010.
  15. ^ a b "UK Government Web Archive". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk.

External links edit

  • Scalable map highlighting the 2011 Nottingham BUA and subdivisions
  • Office for National Statistics: Census 2001, Key Statistics for urban areas
  • Top 50 Urban Areas - 1991 Census
  • Map depicting ONS definition
  • Nottingham Insight - Key datasets

52°58′N 1°09′W / 52.96°N 1.15°W / 52.96; -1.15