The Peak District 360° Project

Peak District 360° Project The Peak District 360° Project is an attempt to map the Peak District National Park, town by town, village by village and provide a resource for visitors, letting them see carefully picked 360° interactive views from each location.

Peak District 360° Project - The Walks

The purpose of the Peak District 360° Project is to inspire people to visit the Peak District National Park, the interactive views act to give visitors a flavour of the region. Also, the Peak District 360° Project has a series of walks whereby reaching a trig point is the goal. By the very nature of these walks, reaching the highest points in the Peak District gives rise to spectacular scenery. The walks are well decribed and are accompanied by photographs at each important junction.

Peak District 360° Project - The Towns and Villages

The Peak District National Park is a vast area that takes in parts Derbyshire, Cheshire, Staffordshire and Yorkshire and within these bounds there are many towns and villages. The aim of the Peak District 360° Project is to provide useful information for each town and village. As the project progresses more and more information for each location will be added and this may include 360° interactive images.

Peak District 360° Project - The Activities

If there are things worth doing in the Peak District National Park, then the chances are that there is a full description of the activity or attraction, with lots of information, maps etc

Peak District 360° Project - The Directory

The directory will give visitors access to information on accomodation, eating out, activities etc. This is aimed at tourism and will be a very useful resource when planning a trip into the National Park.

Fact: The Peak District National Park, whose designation in 1951 made it the earliest national park in the British Isles.
More Facts: An area of great diversity, it is conventionally split into the northern Dark Peak, where most of the moorland is found and whose geology is gritstone, and the southern White Peak, where most of the population lives and where the geology is mainly limestone-based.
Even More Facts: Proximity to the major conurbations of the Midlands, Yorkshire and Lancashire, coupled with easy access by road and rail, make it one of the most visited national parks in the UK.