Description: These areas were drawn after the 2001 Census in consultation with the Area Committees and other local data users to represent distinct communities within Nottingham City. They have been revised for the 2011 Census and have been created from Output Areas. (Both partial and whole).
Description: The Nottingham Travel to Work Area is defined by the Office for National Statistics based on commuting to work patterns to approximate a self contained labour market.
Description: Boundary of the D2N2 Local Enterprise Partnership, comprising Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire Counties, and Derby and Nottingham unitary districts.
Description: Nottingham’s Creative Quarter is an environment that attracts and supports creative and digital businesses to start-up, to spin-out, to grow and to thrive. Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham College and the Confetti Institute of Creative Technologies provide a steady flow of first-class talent with up-to-the-minute skills. Creative Quarter businesses offer well-paid careers, recruit internationally and appeal to investors. A strong independent retail mix and many bars, restaurants, cafés, galleries, arts cinema and theatres make the Creative Quarter a great place to live, learn, work and invest.
Description: This boundary shows the area administered by the Nottingham Park Estate Limited (NPEL). The area is a private estate with certain services provided by NPEL. The NPEL operates on a restricted set of powers and objectives as incorporated under the 1985 Companies Act. Owners of property within the boundary are required to pay a charge which funds the services provided by NPEL. Further information is available from: Nottingham Park Estate Ltd, Park Estate Office, 7a Lenton Road, The Park, Nottingham, NG7 1DP https://nottinghamparkestate.co.uk NOTE: Within this boundary the Estate manages its own infrastructure including street maintenance.
Description: The boundaries of the City Council's saturation zones as outlined in the Licensing Policy, in accordance with the Licensing Act 2003. Saturation zones were introduced through the Licensing Act in 2003, as a response to crime and disorder and nuisance problems arising from the cumulative effect of having a number of licensed premises operating in close proximity to each other in a small area. A saturation zone is only introduced where there is evidence to show that it is 'appropriate and necessary' to introduce a policy to control the growth of licensed premises.
Description: Layer showing metadata for each aerial photography tile, including date the tile was flown. Currently, aerial photography is flown on a three-year rolling cycle so for example the 2019 release can contain tiles flown in 2017, 2018 or 2019.
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Description: Layer showing metadata for each aerial photography tile, including date the tile was flown. Currently, aerial photography is flown on a three-year rolling cycle so for example the 2022 release can contain tiles flown in 2020, 2021, and 2022.
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