| Active Places Power | SPORT ENGLAND |
| ABOUT ACTIVE PLACES POWER | |
|
|
The Active Places Power website has been developed to provide a planning tool for sports facilities.It has been designed to assist in investment decisions across Government and to help local authorities carry out audits of their sports provision and develop local strategies. It also helps national governing bodies of sport in identifying and planning where they need to improve and invest in facilities for their participants. Active Places Power has a single database that holds information on sports facilities throughout England. It includes local authority leisure facilities, as well as commercial and club sites. Local authorities, national governing bodies of sport, government departments and lottery distributors are also be able to use the information to help guide sports facility investment and strategies. The site gives users enhanced capabilities for analysing the data on the system. These include standard reports, census data based thematics and a series of push-button analyses (based on the complex modelling functionality developed by the University of Edinburgh) designed to examine the catchments of existing and potential facilities. Active Places Power users will also be able to download the data and add their own to it and use it with their own analysis tools. The site is password protected and users will be assigned different rights according to their needs and level of use. The website has added functionality over that of the public site. As well as the current public user functionality of Find Nearest, Facility Finder and Freestyle tools the power user site contains tools for detailed analysis:
    Users can create thematic maps as a layer that can be displayed with
    other information - for example facility types and subtypes. The two broad     types of thematic maps that will be available are: a) Facility Distribution Map b) Statistical Distribution Map c) Rural/Urban
Map 2. Reports     Users can choose between three different report types based on the Active
    Places data, with the output produced in table and/or map format. a) Facility Summary Report by Location (aggregated) b) Detailed Report by Facility c) Local Authority Comparison of Facilities 3. Advanced Queries Advanced queries allow the user to search the Active Places database using any combination of predefined criteria. This adds flexibility to the system allowing the user to search for, and find, customised results. For example, the user can build the following query:
Find all Local Authority owned 25m swimming pools with disability access that have a minimum of 5 lanes and have been refurbished in the last 10 years. 4. Strategic Planning Tools This
is the complex modelling functionality for power users that is based upon
analyses from Edinburgh University’s Facilities Planning Model. Ultimately we
intend that there will be 8 different types of analysis, five of which are
currently available, with the remaining three due to be released in 2006. The
tools use population statistics and drive times (among other things) to
calculate supply and demand for sporting facilities. This functionality is
relatively advanced and a user guide accompanies its usage.
5. Data Download Power users can download data subsets (depending on their user rights) to analyse Active Places data on their own computers. This adds flexibility to the website as, if there is a function that Active Places does not offer, users can download the data and perform the task themselves. It also has the benefit that the user can ‘hang’ their own data onto Active Places data using a common referencing system between the two systems. |
||