next
previous
items

Figure

Number of bed places in rural areas per km2 of protected areas

Figure Created 02 Aug 2017 Last modified 02 Aug 2017
1 min read
The number of bed places in an establishment or dwelling is determined by the number of persons who can stay overnight in the beds set up in the establishment (dwelling), ignoring any extra beds that may be set up by customer request. The term bed place applies to a single bed, double beds are counted as two bed places. The unit serves to measure the capacity of any type of accommodation. A bed place is also a place on a pitch or in a boat on a mooring to accommodate one person. One camping pitch should equal four bed places if the actual number of bed places is not known. Rural areas (alternative name: thinly populated areas): more than 50 % of the population lives in rural grid cells (A grid cell outside urban clusters. Urban clusters are contiguous grid cells of 1 km2 with a density of at least 300 inhabitants per km2 and a minimum population of 5000). Protected areas include all figures of protection as specified in CDDA.

European data

Metadata

Additional information

Temporal coverage: 2014. UK data from 2013.

Permalinks

Geographic coverage

Temporal coverage

Topics

Document Actions