"I can honestly say it's the coolest city I've worked with," said Estonian graphic designer Helen Ilus who created the Greenground Map in 2021. "I don't know any other UK city with so much open space and opportunities to go out and get active."
Keen to get out and about myself, I borrowed sections from the Sheffield Round Walk adding an extension into the city centre, hoping to discover both history and green innovations along the way.
My morning began with a steady, puff-inducing climb the River Don Engine would have admired up into leafy Whiteley Woods then a zigzag down the hillside to a footpath alongside the trickling waters of Porter Brook, stopping at the Shepherd Wheel Workshop.
Dating from the late-16th Century, this waterwheel powered grinding stones for sharpening blades. Watching it fill and turn, it was apparent just how inextricably linked Sheffield's natural resources are to its industrial past with weirs, dams and man-made channels visible the length of the rivers.
I then followed the long snaking path through family-favourite Endcliffe Park, with its duck ponds, stepping stones and sports fields, before walking up to the immaculate Sheffield Botanical Gardens, a Grade-II-listed site with period pavilions and a variety of garden styles, from the prim and precise Victorian flowerbeds to the riotous Mediterranean and wild rock gardens – not to mention a rare 19th-Century bear pit.
Here I met Dr Laura Alston, education officer at the gardens, who confirmed, "it's brilliant to be able to travel through so many green spaces even in the urban environment. We are very lucky in Sheffield."
Continuing north, I came to Weston Park, the city's first municipal park opened around 1873. When Sheffield was aglow with factories, this ground-breaking park – an initial acknowledgement from the state for the need for green space – would have provided pockets of clean air and sanctuary for wealthier residents.