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Snowdonia National Park
Snowdonia National Park (Welsh: Parc Cenedlaethol Eryri) was established in 1951 as the third national park in England and Wales. It covers 2,142 km² (840 square miles) of the Snowdonia region of northwestern Wales.
The park is governed by the Snowdonia National Park Authority, which is made up of local government and Welsh national representatives. Unlike national parks in other countries, Snowdonia (and other such parks in England and Wales) are made up of both public and private lands under central planning authority. The makeup of land ownership at Snowdonia is as follows:
ownership type share (%)
Private 69.9
Forestry Commission 15.8
National Trust 8.9
English Nature/CCW 1.7
National Park Authority 1.2
Water Companies 0.9
Other 1.6
More than 26,000 people live within the park, and it attracts millions of visitors each year, as the third most visited national park in England and Wales. While most of the land is either open or mountainous land, there is a significant amount of agricultural activity within the Park.
Unusually, Snowdonia National Park has a hole in the middle, around the town of Blaenau Ffestiniog, a slate quarrying centre which was deliberately excluded from the park when it was set up.
[ Link to Original Article ]
Snowdonia National Park (Welsh: Parc Cenedlaethol Eryri) was established in 1951 as the third national park in England and Wales. It covers 2,142 km² (840 square miles) of the Snowdonia region of northwestern Wales.
The park is governed by the Snowdonia National Park Authority, which is made up of local government and Welsh national representatives. Unlike national parks in other countries, Snowdonia (and other such parks in England and Wales) are made up of both public and private lands under central planning authority. The makeup of land ownership at Snowdonia is as follows:
ownership type share (%)
Private 69.9
Forestry Commission 15.8
National Trust 8.9
English Nature/CCW 1.7
National Park Authority 1.2
Water Companies 0.9
Other 1.6
More than 26,000 people live within the park, and it attracts millions of visitors each year, as the third most visited national park in England and Wales. While most of the land is either open or mountainous land, there is a significant amount of agricultural activity within the Park.
Unusually, Snowdonia National Park has a hole in the middle, around the town of Blaenau Ffestiniog, a slate quarrying centre which was deliberately excluded from the park when it was set up.
[ Link to Original Article ]