Parks Green Bank Fields This park is a green area stretching between Manor Road in the north, Mount Road in the east and Barlow Road in the south and west. It is primarily open grassland but also houses an open-air, enclosed
5-a-side football pitch adjacent to the Mount Road exit. Until about 1920 the land that Green Bank Fields was on held a dairy farm called Green Bank Farm (Wolfenden's) and a small house called Botany Bay Cottage. The entrance to the farm was originally where the main entrance to the park is now on Barlow Road adjacent to Byrom Parade shops.
Highfield Country Park Highfield Country Park is a area of open land that stretches to the east of Broom Avenue across to the back of Reddish Golf Course and over to the junction of Longford Road and Nelstrop Road. In the 1970s it was designated as a country park by the council, but at the time it wasn't much more than a
landfill site that was formerly the site of the
UCP tripe factory, Jackson's Brickworks, Levenshulme Dye and Bleach Works and High Field Farm. The claypit formed by the extracted clay for the brickworks was much used by local children as a play area, known as "the Brickie". Until 2004 the park was jointly maintained by
Manchester City Council and a group of volunteers called the 'Friends of Highfield Park'. In July 2004 the park came to the attention of the Prudential Grass Roots campaign (run by the
BTCV conservation charity). Over a 12-month period the park was transformed from a dreary, vandalised wasteland into a pleasant country park with a picnic area and mapped out country walks.
Nutsford Vale Country Park Nutsford Vale is a formally declared 'open space' ensuring that it remains green space, and that it does not suffer from adverse building development. The area is a local oasis for bird life, insects and other wildlife, made up of rough grassland and a wide variety of trees, providing a home for a variety of plants and animal species. The Friends of Nutsford Vale and a committee provide a management and maintenance plan for the site. There are various access points with the main entrances located at the end of Bickerdike Avenue M12 5SZ and on Matthews Lane M19 3DS.
Cringle Park Cringle Park is a recreational park located next to Levenshulme High School on Errwood Road, adjoining Crossley Road. It is a small park; however, it features facilities such as a children's play area, football court, basketball court, two tennis courts and a boxing club. A sundial in the centre of a Stonehenge was erected on top of a small hill in this park, which serves as an aesthetically pleasing spot for families to visit. A small mobile coffee shop on a bicycle serves drinks and snacks. Cringle Park is managed by Manchester City Council. It has a strong and active
Friends of group, who support community events and actively campaign for improvements in the park. It is a peaceful open space with many spots to relax in and is also a very popular dog-walking park.
Paths The
Fallowfield Loop shared use path passes through the suburb. It follows the route of the former
Fallowfield Loop railway line, which was closed in October 1988. It is approximately long and connects
Chorlton-cum-Hardy in the west with
Fairfield in the east. It can be accessed beside the site of the former
Levenshulme South railway station on the
A6.
Sport Swimming Levenshulme Swimming Baths was built in the late 19th century and was formerly called "Levenshulme Public Baths and Washhouse" as it also housed the public washhouse at the side. In the late 1920s and early 1930s Levenshulme Baths was used as a training pool for Longsight resident
Sunny Lowry, who, in 1933, was the first British woman to swim the
English Channel (from France to England).
Arcadia Sports Centre Located on Yew Tree Avenue, this sports facility was formerly home to Manchester Roller Hockey Club and affectionately known to locals as "the Shed". On 20 February 2016, the new Arcadia Leisure Centre opened on the site of the old sports hall.
Community Library Levenshulme Library is a "
Carnegie library" as it was gifted to the people of Levenshulme by industrialist and philanthropist
Andrew Carnegie. The ceremonial laying of the first brick (in reality an engraved stone plaque) took place on 5 December 1903. The stone was laid by George Paulson in his role as Chairman of the Free Library Committee. The library actually opened its doors to the public in 1904. At the time the money was gifted there was a minor local furore as some Levenshulme residents expressed the opinion that it was "immoral" for the then urban district council to accept the money from Carnegie as they believed the money to be "tainted". This was allegedly due to Carnegie's suppression of trade unions in the United States. ==Education==