Parkland in a sentence as a noun

Some of those parks listed have nothing but parkland inside of them.

If you don't like it, don't put up the walls and compete at being the best flower in open parkland.

The amount of parkland in NYC is greater than the total amount of land in most cities, period.

This particular riverbank is owned by the council - it's essentially a strip of parkland.

Seattle has a huge city limits, but much of it is undeveloped parkland or somewhat industrial.

Multiply by a two-hundred-meter-deep landfill and that plastic will finish going away in about a million yearsYou can take a landfill, put dirt over the top, and now you have parkland for people to use. It's happened to two intracity landfills within a couple of kilometers of where I live.

It's as if one is on a pleasant jaunt through bucolic parkland, punctuated repeatedly by intersections with angry vehicular traffic that can't possibly see the cyclist before she enters the intersection.

Surely it's something that would allow you to make an authoritative statement about what does or does not damage a piece of protected parkland, otherwise you'd simply be making unsupported assertions on a topic you know nothing about.

Other cities in Michigan have done something similar: Flint started a program to assist moving residents out of sparsely populated, heavily foreclosed areas, into more densely populated areas, consolidating people and turning abandoned neighborhoods into parkland.

Parkland definitions

noun

a large area of land preserved in its natural state as public property; "there are laws that protect the wildlife in this park"

See also: park