Allestree Park and Hall The area known as Allestree Park was
enclosed in about 1818 and lies in the northern part of Allestree just inside the city boundaries. It has over of parkland, a permanent orienteering course and an angling lake. The park area, has been designated a nature reserve because of the diversity of habitats and species present. The main habitats present within the reserve include a large area of woodland to the north, a number of fields with a mixture of quality of grassland and a stream that flows through the site and a number of associated marshes. The park is currently () the site of the largest urban rewilding project in the UK. Allestree Hall is a 19th-century former country house in Allestree Park. It is a
Grade II* listed building made of millstone grit from Derwent Bank. The house was begun by Bache Thornhill and completed by John Giradot (
High Sheriff of Derbyshire) with three storeys and five bays, the central three bowed with an ionic columned porch. , it remained on the Heritage at Risk register.
Markeaton Park Markeaton Park lies in the south of the suburb, bordering
Mackworth Estate below and
Darley Abbey to the east. The park has a long history, being used to raise deer and boar as far back as the 1500s. A hall was built on the estate in the 16th century though the exact dates are unknown; this was demolished in 1755 and a new hall erected in the same location designed by James Denstone of Derby. In 1964 Markeaton Hall was demolished because of neglect and structural damage caused during the army's stay there. The only remnants of the original hall are the late 18th-century Grade II listed
orangery that is used as a café, a number of walled gardens and ornamental gardens such as the formal terrace, the Rose Garden and herbaceous borders. In September 1975 the park and its surroundings were designated a Conservation Area and Markeaton Park today is a public park covering approximately and the most-used leisure facility in Derby, with over 1 million visitors per year. A variety of activities are spread throughout the park, including a boating lake, pitch and putt course, children's playground, mini golf course and
a light railway. The park attracts people from around Derby but also from smaller surrounding towns such as Belper,
Ilkeston and
Ashbourne and even from as far as
Nottingham and
Sheffield. Markeaton Park can, therefore, be considered to be of regional significance.
Old village centre The historical village centre is centred on the junction of St Edmund's Close, Cornhill and Park Lane. This area has the majority of listed buildings within the ward, with the 12th-century St Edmund's Church, Red Cow inn and Old School house along St Edmund's Close and three properties along Cornhill. Yew Tree Cottage is further along Cornhill away from the village centre, but is the only timber-framed and thatched cottage left in the area. ==Demography==