Like any public service, park managers need to take a cost-effective and efficient approach to managing and maintaining their parks. In order to make evidence based decisions a parks service needs to understand the usage profile of their sites including the number, timing and purpose of visits.  This information is very difficult to obtain using traditional methods, especially if data is required over all times of day, times of week and times of year.

WISEParks is one of 5 projects within 'Rethinking Parks' - a partnership between Big Lottery Fund, Heritage Lottery Fund and Nesta.

The University of Nottingham will test WiFi sensing as a potential solution to the challenge of understanding parks users and usage. The project will take an iterative approach, testing both sensing hardware and analysis software. The aim is to create more cost effective and privacy aware solutions and guidance for parks managers to use in engagement and parks management. They will work in partnership with Nottingham City Council, with a particular focus on Colwick Park and Highfields Park.

Outputs from WISEParks will address important knowledge gaps in the Park Service’s understanding of users, and provide information to build:

WISEParks II is an extension of WISEParks which developed methods for counting the users of parks and green spaces using signals emitted from ‘smart’ devices. This information has been provided to Nottingham City Council (NCC) to support funding proposals for park improvements, evidence value from previous improvement works and plan park maintenance. During  WISEParks II we will be equipping more parks with counting sensors, developing pathways to make the data more accessible to parks staff and preparing to open the data for public access.  The project supports NCC as part of their 20 year strategic plan for parks and open spaces in Nottingham City.


If you have visited one of our parks and would like to opt-out please contact WISEParks@nottingham.ac.uk including the MAC address of your WiFi device in your message. The information below might be useful to you.

At each park we are counting the number of Wi-Fi enabled devices which move within range of detectors placed at carefully chosen locations around the parks. Most Wi-Fi enabled devices periodically send out ‘probe requests’ when they are searching for a network. These requests are received by our detectors and contain information including the identity of the hardware sending the request, the 'MAC address'. We store a disguised version of the MAC address along with the time the probe request signal was received and the strength of the received signal.

We need your MAC address in order to find your data in our dataset. It will be disguised in the same way as the collected data and used to search our datasets for your data. Without your MAC address we cannot identify your data.

A useful guide to finding your MAC address can be found here.

WiseParks Project Page:  https://www.horizon.ac.uk/project/wiseparks/
WiseParks II Project Page:  https://www.horizon.ac.uk/project/wiseparks-ii/