Paths And Core Paths - Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park

Every local authority and National Park authority (access authorities) in Scotland is required to draw up a plan for a system of paths (core paths) sufficient for the purpose of giving the public reasonable access throughout their area.

Core paths are paths, waterways or any other means of crossing land to facilitate, promote and manage the exercise of access rights under the Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003, and are identified as such in access authority core paths plan.

There are, intentionally, no set physical standards for core paths. This means that core paths can physically be anything from a faint line across a field to a fully constructed path, track or pavement. The National Access Forum, Scottish Natural Heritage and Scottish Government are encouraging information to be surveyed and made publicly available, in a nationally-standardised form, so that the public will know what physical type of route they can expect. Government guidance is making core paths the priority for rolling out this national standardised grading system information, which is set out at http://www.pathsforall.org.uk/pfa/creating-paths/path-grading-system.html

Data

Data Provided by

Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park

License

UK Open Government Licence (OGL)

Metadata Created

2017-02-03

Metadata Updated

2023-10-31

Attribution

path_code, gid, route_code, path_name, type, description, local_authority

Contacts

None

Coverage

Scotland

Key Stakeholders

Public, Communities, Scottish Government, Scottish Natural Heritage, Paths For All, Sustrans, other Third Sector organisations, outdoor leisure industry.

Management

None

Potentially Confidential

false

Statutory Context

Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003

Type

line

Typical Scale

1:10000