Abstract

The spread of COVID-19 and corresponding government interventions have changed residents’ travel and mobility, and recent academic literatures suggests that this have had a positive impact on rural recreation. This study analyzed the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on rural recreation from the perspective of population mobility, aiming to explore the changes in park visits during the pandemic, identify the motivation and demand of urban residents for leisure activities under the impact of the pandemic and to test the hypothesis of the accelerating the shift to rural recreation. Using the UK as the case study, it compared the park visits in four stages according to the COVID-19 policies: pre-, strict, eased, and fully lifted lockdown. Based on multivariate datasets, stepwise regression models of park visits in urban areas of 25 counties in the UK during each stage were constructed and compared. The results showed that residents preferred to visit smaller parks before and in the early stage of the pandemic. In the strict lockdown stage, the movement of residents to parks decreased significantly. During the eased lockdown period, park visits increased significantly, but there was clear spatial variation across the country attributed to the severity of the pandemic in each region, and different control policies of local governments. During the period when the lockdown was fully lifted, the frequency of park visits remained an increasing trend compared to the baseline period but decreased slightly compared to the eased lockdown period due to the increasing number of park visitors and more crowded park sites. Obviously, residents were more willing to visit distant country parks after an extended period of lockdown control, and mainly congregated in dispersed recreation sites such as the wilderness and forests that were distributed outside of urban areas and farther away. This study broadens the related literature using the evidence from changes of park visits, which to some extent confirms that the pandemic accelerates the leisure activities taking place from urban to suburban parks. The results can provide new inspiration for the future research on rural recreation and tourism, and also provide guidelines for planning peri-urban rural parks to prepare for future public health crises along with the population shift tendency.

Full Text
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