Swanshurst Park
- Address
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Swanshurst Park, off Yardley Wood Road/Swanshurst Lane, Kings Heath, Birmingham B13 0DH
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- How to get there and parking
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Entrance to park via Yardley Wood Road and Swanhurst Lane (B4146).
Car park off Yardley Wood Road.
Bus stops on Yardley Wood Road.
- About the park
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Once common grazing ground, Swanhurst Park is now a well-established and much-loved green space used for a range of leisure past times and activities.
Much of the park is a natural heathland making it a nature conservation habitat for the city. There is also a popular children’s playground and the site includes Moseley New Pool, established more than 250 years ago when an earth dam was built across the valley of a tiny brook by Henry Giles to create a fish pond. It is still used by anglers but is also home to a large number of wild birds.
In the spring and summer, the park is also alive with the sights and sounds of funfairs and even a circus. On a day-to-day basis it is a haven for dog walkers and for people just looking for a stroll in the fresh air and natural open spaces and tree-lined pathways.
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- Video introduction
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- Facilities at the park
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- Children’s playground
- Basketball hoop
- Fishing available in the New Pool
- Multiple benches across the park
- Toilets
- There are no toilets on site.
- Points of interest
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- Moseley New Pool
- The park plays host to a number of active wellbeing activities and sports groups
- Other features
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- Accessible paths (around the pool)
- Bird watching
- Cycling paths
- Formal walking routes
- Large variety of trees, grassland areas and marshes
- Nature trails
- Waterfowl
- Park friends group
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For further information, or to get involved, email: swanshurstpark@gmail.com
- Parks friends group activities
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The aim of Swanshurst Park Friends Group is to:
- organise and support regular litter picking activity
- encourage physical activity and emotional wellbeing in the local community
- work with local schools to develop an appreciation of nature
- work with the parks’ manager, park rangers and other stakeholders to identify and reduce instances of anti-social behaviour
- understand and help protect the park’s habitat and wildlife
- explore funding opportunities to support improvements to the park