The Guardian

Slow Ways

The Guardian: Walk the walk: the app mapping 140,000 miles of public right of way


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“The Victorians left us street trees and parks. National parks were the legacy of the second world war. What will our legacy be?” he says. “What if 75 years after the creation of national parks, our politicians created their own legacy for future generations – a proper national walking and wheeling network that’s as easy to understand as the road and rail network but far more joyful, healthy, green, relationship-building and community-connecting and inspiring? What’s not to like?”

Photo: Fabio De Paola for the Guardian

It was a pleasure to walk Slow Ways from Kidsgrove to Macclesfield with Patrick Barkham for the Guardian. It was a great hike that celebrated Slow Ways and included no less than four kingfishers!

You can read the full story here.

The Slow Ways team is now working on a new citizen-geography project called Make Ways. While Slow Ways shows good ways to go, Make Ways will enable people to map ways they’d like to go… but can’t. You can find out more about Make Ways and back the project here.

Slow Ways

The Guardian: How the Slow Ways network could change walking in Britain


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“Once you’re allowed to visit family or friends around the UK, why not ditch the car or train and go on foot instead? That’s what the creators of Slow Ways want to encourage. It’s an ambitious new project to create a network of walking routes between all of Great Britain’s towns and cities, as well as thousands of villages.

The brainchild of geographer and explorer Dan Raven-Ellison, and supported by Ordnance Survey, the idea is to get people walking between locations they might otherwise drive or take public transport to – via existing off-road paths and bridleways – and to promote slower types of travel.” Jane Dunford

Read the whole article on The Guardian’s website.