Walking is the most common activity in Royal Park. The new master plan proposes making it easier and safer to navigate the whole of the park using active transport, but particularly as a pedestrian. Recommendations are informed by the detailed examination of existing active transport routes.

What we heard in 2023

Community engagement conducted in 2023 confirmed that Royal Park South is the most visited area in the park – featuring Nature Play, the Australian Native Garden and Grassland Circle.

The least visited area is Royal Park West – home to the Trin Warren Tam-boore Wetland and Manningham Play Space (Appendix 3.2 Community engagement).

These visitation differences indicate that locations with few cross-roads or public transport options are harder to reach and therefore used less. Sub-optimal pedestrian infrastructure and busy traffic conditions, particularly around the Macarthur Road and Elliott Avenue corridor, as well as across tram and train lines also pose challenges to pedestrian accessibility and safety.

Aspirations and priorities

The draft Master Plan identifies several aspirations for how we support movement to and through the park:

  • Support safe and equitable access for all transport modes.
  • Prioritise active and sustainable modes of transport.
  • Improve the experience of walking and wheeling across the park.
  • Improve pedestrian access across significant movement barriers.
  • Ensure intuitive wayfinding throughout the park.
  • Expand the network of paths to improve circulation.

Several priority actions within the draft Master Plan that apply to the park as a whole will also help to support movement to and through the park:

  • Implement the proposed path hierarchy – strategic movement corridors, connector paths, circuits and exploration trails.
  • Explore the lighting of strategic movement corridors in the north south route and the east west route to encourage active transport along preferred paths.
  • Implement walking, wheeling and running circuits that connect key features and destinations within the park.
  • Develop and implement a wayfinding strategy.

Map of movement and circuit paths

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