Reviews of Nutsford Vale Park. (Parking Garage) in Manchester (Greater Manchester).
Nutsford Vale Park
Levenshulme, Manchester M12 5QG, United Kingdom
Description
Information of Nutsford Vale Park, Parking garage in Manchester (Greater Manchester)
On this page you’ll find the address, open hours, more popular times, the contact, photos and real reviews of this business.
This business has received very good reviews from their customers, so probably it’s a place you should try if you are looking for this kind of services.
Map
Open hours of Nutsford Vale Park
Sunday
Open 24 hours
Monday
Open 24 hours
Tuesday
Open 24 hours
Wednesday
Open 24 hours
Thursday
Open 24 hours
Friday
Open 24 hours
Saturday
Open 24 hours
Popular times
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Reviews of Nutsford Vale Park
A. A.
Good place to walk around but it is mostly over grown bushes etc. Cycling in this park is good idea but it isnot paved pathway. Especially if you have pushchair or kids to take to this park it is not easy to manoeuvre any pushchair/wheelchair etc.. if you like nature and birds it is a good place to visit. Plenty of parking spaces next to each entrance
D. G.
Quiet. Clean. Lonely. Narrow one person paths. A great spot to walk if you enjoy solitude. Not recommended for more than one walker as narrow paths make it hard to walk side by side
M. P.
This is a nice little place to visit. It's surrounded by housing estates but it's been cleared and cleaned up over the years by a lot of different groups of people, volunteer groups and individuals. I think there is a friend's of group as well. It's not a big park or anything like that but it's a good size and perfect for walking through and there are path's that cross over the meadows and some small wooded areas.
N. F.
This could be a truly lovely calming place but doesn't always feel safe as a lone woman. There is a lot of fly tipping
J. W.
Nutsford Vale is another one of the great wild parks of southern Manchester. Along with Highfield, it perfectly encompasses waht a park should be. Although slightly smaller, it still has many winding paths, assorted copses of trees, and even a nice little pond. Perfect for picnicking, wandering, or exploring.
i.
Compact bit of brush and grass with plenty of gravel path for a leisurely escape from traffic. The odd bench aids the peaceful and secluded atmosphere.
G. J.
Love it. Proper wild vibes in the city. Shame about litter in the bushes and evening drug dealing but the actual space is beautiful
S. Z.
A much needed green space in the Levenshulme area. This used to be a clay quarry that became neglected and was subjected to fly tipping and antisocial behaviour. Hence it was changed into a green space. There is some still antisocial behaviour. The space is also being threatened due to proposed developments.
J. J.
Nutsford Vale is a delightful wooded recreational area between Gorton and Levenshulme, an area much in need of green spaces, ideal for a walk with children and a dog or two. It was the site of a brick works clay pit, but the old pit was used as a dumping ground for waste from the local chemical and dye works in N. Manchester such as ICI and Clayton Aniline. One has to assume that the materials dumped here were difficult to dispose of in any other way because they were too toxic and expensive to process chemically or to tip into the river, as was often the practise in those days. No record was kept of what went into the tip, until dumping stopped in the 1980's. I always wondered where the mountain of 'black ash' from Clayton Aniline went! The pit was capped and the site levelled and trees grown, in time making the Vale the delight it is today. But it may not be for much longer! Manchester City Council are proposing to build a 1300 place school on much of the site, as 'brownfield' sites are now regarded as being better for such purposes than using green belt land. I would call this toxic waste dump a 'black field' site however, and certainly would not regard it as a suitable place to build a school. The council so far have refused to reveal the results of any tests they have done to find out what is under there, which suggests to me that either they have not looked, or they have found things they don't want to talk about. Very poisonous Aniline? Carcinogens like Benzidine? Who knows, the raw materials and by-products of the dye industry here were particularly nasty, and would cost the earth (no pun intended) to remove. We need green spaces, the city needs green lungs, and I don't see why we need an extra school here, when there are empty schools already available nearby.