Sometimes I wonder. Think about a National Park for a second - you might come up with images of the Lake District, a grand Cairngorm or Sussex's rolling downs. Maybe your thoughts stray a little further to embrace a wilderness park like Yellowstone or even the Serengeti. I think of the Andalucian Sierras towering over the assorted Costas where we lounge, drink, eat and get sunburned.
But none of you thought of Birmingham!
"I think we have an extraordinary landscape here waiting to be discovered by millions,” says landscape architect Kathryn Moore, unrolling a jauntily coloured map of her visionary new park in a Birmingham City University office. The professor isn’t talking about of Cumbria, Umbria, Snowdonia or Amazonia. She’s talking about the touristic potential of the West Midlands plateau, the heart of England that threw itself into the fiery crucible of the Industrial Revolution and still bears sacrificial scars. It is here that Professor Moore wants to create the United Kingdom’s 16th national park.
Now I'm pretty sure that there's some great stuff about the 'west midlands plateau' but I'm also sure that it's importance isn't about its landscape, wildlife or ecology but rather the glimpses of industrial heritage, the prospect of culture and the attractions of the city. These aren't the stuff of national parks.
Why do people dream up this nonsense?
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1 comment:
Birmingham is a good city, my girlfriend lives there.
http://dry-valleys.tumblr.com/tagged/birmingham
The thing that is hinted at in that article and in your response, but not fully expressed, is that there is ecological value in ex-industrial and "brownfield" sites. I recommend this book to advise on that.
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/edgelands-journeys-into-englands-true-wilderness-by-paul-farley-and-michael-symmons-2224516.html
It's fascinating, there are many such sites where I live in Stoke so I immediately got it.
I naturally don't agree with creating a new national park there (?) but a rethinking of the value of "brownfield" sites would be welcome, as such sites are often much more ecologically valuable than "greenfield" sites which have been ploughed for decades or centuries; is such a (heavily subsidised) place really worth more than a stand of self-seeding trees along the canal?
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