Historical Public Parks: Investigating Contemporary Visitor Needs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. History of Research Area
2.2. Questionnaire Survey Content and Conduct
- Participant details: included gender, age, marital and parental status, occupation, location of residence, and park visit companion.
- Accessibility: means and ease of travel, duration of travel, satisfaction of travel (yes/no option), duration of visit, preferred time and day of visit, and frequency of visit.
- Areas of defined use: reason to visit, location within park visited, and visitation of other parks (yes/no option).
- Perceptions on qualitative and quantitative planting: perception of plant aesthetics, quantity, maintained condition (five-point Likert scale), and preferred qualitative traits plants offer.
- Perceptions on qualitative and quantitative park furniture: perception of park furniture aesthetics (five-point Likert scale), quantity, and maintained condition (five-point Likert scale).
- Visitor–park management involvement: awareness of managing authority (yes/no option), state the managing authority, and willingness to volunteer in gardening and clean-ups (yes/no).
- Perception of safety: perception of safety (five-point Likert scale), awareness of the security personnel present (yes/no), and desire to have security personnel present within the NG (yes/no).
- Overall satisfaction of needs: participants rate the satisfaction in meeting their needs from their visit (10-point scale, where 1 = not satisfied and 10 = extremely satisfied), most- and least-liked characteristics of NG (open-ended), and optionally proposing improvements of NG (open-ended).
2.3. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participant details
3.2. Accessibility
3.3. Areas of Defined Use
3.4. Perceptions on Qualitative and Quantitative Planting
3.5. Perceptions on Qualitative and Quantitative Park Furniture
3.6. Visitor–Park Management Involvement
3.7. Perception of Safety
3.8. Overall Satisfaction of Needs
4. Discussion
4.1. Participant Details
4.2. Accessibility
4.3. Areas of Defined Use
4.4. Perceptions on Qualitative and Quantitative Planting
4.5. Perceptions on Qualitative and Quantitative Park Furniture
4.6. Visitor–Park Management Involvement
4.7. Perception of Safety
4.8. Overall Satisfaction of Needs
4.9. Research Implications
- A good transport system to access historical park supports visitation.
- The perception of tranquility within a historical park attracts visitors.
- Where appropriate, a small zoo/aviary and playground in historical parks attracts visitors.
- The existing path system in historical parks can attract visitors.
- Visitors desire to have drinking water fountains in the park; public awareness of their presence needs to be considered.
- The combined effect of good maintenance and the presence of security personnel makes visitors appreciate the planting without fear.
- The presence of security personnel increases the perception of safety and must be supported; the security personnel uniform can influence the perception of their presence.
- Visitors show interest in volunteerism that historical park authorities can utilize appropriately and raise awareness for the protection and conservation of their park.
- Visitors desire cleanliness to be maintained.
- Suggested improvements by visitors (i.e., increasing park furniture) should be carefully considered in complying with measures for the protection of the historical park, as well as the associated wildlife habitat; proposals that do not comply with measures for the protection of the historical park should be dismissed.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Questions | Response Options |
---|---|
Participant details | |
gender; age; marital status; parental status; occupation; location of residence; park visit companion | M/F; <18, 18–30, 31–40, 41–50, 51–60, >60 years; single, married, divorced, widowed; yes/no; open-ended question; student, self-employed, employee, pensioner, household maintenance, civil worker, pupil, unemployed |
Accessibility | |
How do you travel to the park? | 1. walk; 2. cycle; 3. public transport (i. bus; ii. metro; iii. tram; iv. trolley bus); 4. motorbike; 5. private car; 6. school bus; 7. taxi |
How do you characterize your travel to the park? | 1. very easy; 2. easy; 3. moderate; 4. difficult; 5. very difficult |
How long does it take to travel to the park? | 5 min; 10 min; 15 min; 20 min; 30 min; 45 min; 60 min |
Are you satisfied with your travel to the park? If no, please state why. | yes/no; open-ended question |
How often do you visit the park? | 1. daily; 2. weekly (i. Monday; ii. Tuesday; iii. Wednesday; iv. Thursday; v. Friday vi. no particular day); 3. every weekend; 4. holidays; 5. monthly; 6. annually |
For how long do you visit the park? | 30 min; 1 h; 1 h 30 min; 2 h; 2 h 30 min; 3 h; >3 h |
Who accompanies you during your visit to the park? | 1. nobody; 2. family; 3. friend; 4. partner; 5. spouse 6. grandchild; 7. pet; 8. other |
Areas of defined use | |
Why do you visit the park? | 1. tranquility; 2. exercise; 3. child walk outdoors; 4. socialization; 5. walking through different entrance points; 6. cycling |
What area of the park do you visit? | 1. open spaces (i. entire garden; ii. lakes; iii. fountains; iv. pergolas; v. seating areas; vi. paths); 2. playground; 3. small zoo and aviary; 4. café shop; 5. botanical museum |
Do you visit other parks within Attica? | yes/no |
Perceptions on qualitative and quantitative planting | |
How do you rate the aesthetics of the planting in the park? | 1. very good; 2. good; 3. moderate; 4. poor; 5. very poor; 6.do not know |
How do you rate the quantity of planting in the park? | 1. abundant; 2. sufficient; 3. limited; 4. do not know; 5. indifferent |
How do you rate the maintenance of the planting in the park? | 1. very good; 2. good; 3. moderate; 4. poor; 5. very poor; 6. do not know |
What qualitative traits of plants do you most prefer? | 1. provide shade; 2. flowering; 3. aromatic; 4. autumn leaf color; 5. wind rustling sound effect; 6. deciduous; 7. evergreen; 8. fruit; 9. fruitless; 10. indifferent |
Perceptions on qualitative and quantitative park furniture | |
How do you rate the aesthetics of the park furniture in the park? | 1. very good; 2. good; 3. moderate; 4. poor; 5. very poor; 6.do not know |
How do you rate the quantity of park furniture in the park? If not sufficient, what park furniture would you like to have more of? | sufficient/non-sufficient (i. seats; ii. lampposts; iii. information posts; iv. signage; v. rubbish bins; vi. table benches; vii. drinking water fountains; viii. wi-fi hotspots) |
How do you rate the maintenance of the park furniture in the park? | 1. very good; 2. good; 3. moderate; 4. poor; 5. very poor; 6. do not know |
Visitor–park management involvement | |
Do you know the managing authority for the park? If yes, please state. | yes/no; correct/wrong answer |
Would you like to volunteer in the maintenance of the park? If yes, what type of maintenance would you like to volunteer in? | yes/no; gardening/clean-up/both |
Perception of safety | |
How do you rate your perception of safety within the park? | 1. very safe; 2. safe; 3. moderately safe; 4. little safe; 5. unsafe |
How do you rate the amount of security personnel within the park? | 1. very good; 2. good; 3. moderate; 4. poor; 5. very poor; 6. does not exist; 7. do not know |
Would you like to have security personnel present within the park? | yes/no |
Overall satisfaction of needs | |
Please rate at a scale from 1 to 10 how satisfied you are with your visit to the park. | scale (1 = not satisfied, 10 = extremely satisfied) |
What are your most liked characteristics of the park? | open-ended |
What are your least liked characteristics of the park? | open-ended |
Gender | Number | Percentage | Parental Status | Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Male | 85 | 42.1 | parent | 87 | 43.1 |
Female | 117 | 57.9 | not | 115 | 56.9 |
Age | Marital status | ||||
<18 years | 8 | 4 | single | 117 | 57.9 |
18–30 years | 89 | 44.1 | married | 74 | 36.6 |
31–40 years | 27 | 13.4 | divorced | 9 | 4.5 |
41–50 years | 21 | 10.4 | widowed | 2 | 1.0 |
51–60 years | 27 | 13.4 | |||
>60 years | 30 | 14.9 | |||
Occupation | |||||
Student | 56 | 27.7 | |||
Self-employed | 38 | 18.8 | |||
Employee | 35 | 17.3 | |||
Pensioner | 29 | 14.4 | |||
Household maintenance | 16 | 7.9 | |||
Civil worker | 15 | 7.4 | |||
Pupil | 8 | 4.0 | |||
Unemployed | 5 | 2.5 |
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Paraskevopoulou, A.; Klados, A.; Malesios, C. Historical Public Parks: Investigating Contemporary Visitor Needs. Sustainability 2020, 12, 9976. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12239976
Paraskevopoulou A, Klados A, Malesios C. Historical Public Parks: Investigating Contemporary Visitor Needs. Sustainability. 2020; 12(23):9976. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12239976
Chicago/Turabian StyleParaskevopoulou, Angeliki, Andreas Klados, and Chrysovalantis Malesios. 2020. "Historical Public Parks: Investigating Contemporary Visitor Needs" Sustainability 12, no. 23: 9976. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12239976
APA StyleParaskevopoulou, A., Klados, A., & Malesios, C. (2020). Historical Public Parks: Investigating Contemporary Visitor Needs. Sustainability, 12(23), 9976. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12239976