North East Green Belt

The North East Green Belt, also known as the Tyne & Wear Green Belt, is a non-statutory green belt environmental and planning policy that regulates the rural space in part of the North East region of England. It is centred on the county of Tyne and Wear,[1][2][3][4] with areas of belt extending into Northumberland[5] and County Durham.[6] The belt functions to protect surrounding towns and villages outside the Tyneside/Newcastle-upon-Tyne and Wearside/Sunderland conurbations from further convergence.[7] It is managed by local planning authorities on guidance from central government.

North East England green belt showing extents, districts and counties.
  North East green belt
  County borders
  District/unitary council borders

Geography

The belt's area is 71,854 hectares (718.54 km2; 277.43 sq mi), 0.6% of the total land area of England (2010).[8] The belt is on the fringes of the Tyne & Wear conurbations, with a line of belt separating South Tyneside from Sunderland. The main coverage of the belt however, is within southern Northumberland, with tracts in northern County Durham, notably surrounding the city of Durham completely.

Much of the boundary is formed by local roads and land features such as rivers. The western extent reaches 25 miles away from Newcastle, beyond Hexham and towards Haydon Bridge, becoming contiguous with the North Pennines AONB and nearly meeting the Northumberland National Park. Due to the belt lying across county borders, responsibility and co-ordination lies with several unitary councils as these are the local planning authorities.

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gollark: It's fine if you get things wrong, as long as you do not blindly insist you're not wrong when you are.
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See also

References

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