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Community Green Space Policies in Poland

Public green space in Polish cities is governed by a combination of national legislation, municipal spatial plans, and maintenance regulations. This article outlines the key policy instruments that determine how green space is designated, managed, and made accessible to the public — with particular focus on riverside and urban park environments.

Royal Baths Park, Warsaw — public green space

National Legislative Framework

The principal national instrument governing public green space in Poland is the Act on Nature Conservation (Ustawa o ochronie przyrody, 2004), which establishes definitions for urban green categories and sets out general obligations for maintaining ecological continuity in urban areas. Municipalities are required to identify and protect areas of greenery, trees, and shrubs of public value.

The Act on Maintaining Order and Cleanliness in Municipalities (Ustawa o utrzymaniu czystości i porządku w gminach) places maintenance responsibilities for public green space — including parks, roadside plantings, and riverbank areas — on local authorities (gminy). The specifics of what maintenance is required, and to what standard, are determined in local regulations (regulamin utrzymania czystości i porządku).

The 2023 revision of the Spatial Planning and Land Development Act introduced a new planning instrument, the General Plan (Plan Ogólny), which each municipality must now prepare. The General Plan includes mandatory provisions for greenery and open space, establishing minimum standards for green space continuity in urban functional areas.

Municipal Green Space Classification

Polish municipal plans classify public green space using standardised codes. The most relevant for river-adjacent environments are:

Riverside Access Rights

Polish Water Law (Prawo wodne, 2017, Article 234) establishes a right of public access to state-owned watercourse banks for the purpose of navigation, fishing, and recreation. This access right covers a 1.5-metre strip from the water's edge on state-managed watercourses. Property owners adjacent to these watercourses cannot legally block this access strip.

In practice, the application of this provision in urban areas varies. Where municipal riverside parks formally incorporate the bank zone, access is clear. In areas where private development abuts the river without a formal park designation, enforcement of the access right is inconsistent and often requires intervention from regional water management authorities.

Warsaw: Declared Public Benefit Warsaw formally designated its Vistula riverbank zones as public benefit areas (cel publiczny) in its municipal spatial plans. This designation gives the city stronger legal tools for maintaining public access and controlling adjacent development. It also enables the city to compulsorily acquire land needed for bank access routes, a mechanism used in several disputed sections during the Bulwary Wiślane redevelopment.

Green Space Maintenance Responsibilities

Municipal Obligations

Municipalities (gminy) bear primary responsibility for maintaining parks and public green space within their administrative boundaries. This includes:

In larger cities, these tasks are typically contracted to specialist municipal enterprises (zakłady zieleni miejskiej) or tendered to private landscape maintenance companies under public procurement rules.

Tree Protection Rules

The Nature Conservation Act requires a permit for the removal of trees with a trunk circumference exceeding specified thresholds (typically 100 cm at 130 cm height for most species; lower thresholds for protected species). Removal permits are issued by the mayor or president of the city (wójt/burmistrz/prezydent). Compensation planting is typically required as a condition of removal permits for trees in public spaces.

Public Participation in Green Space Planning

Polish planning law requires mandatory public consultation during the preparation of Local Spatial Development Plans and, since 2023, General Plans. For green space specifically, this means residents and community organisations have formal opportunities to comment on proposed designations, changes to park boundaries, and planned development adjacent to green areas.

Beyond statutory consultation, Polish cities have increasingly used participatory budgeting (budżet obywatelski) as a mechanism for community-led green space improvements. Warsaw's participatory budget has funded a series of riverside greening projects — pocket parks, bench installations, and community garden plots — since the programme was introduced in 2014. Kraków and Wrocław operate similar schemes.

EU Policy Context

Polish green space policy is increasingly shaped by EU-level frameworks. The EU Biodiversity Strategy 2030 sets targets for expanding urban green space and establishing green infrastructure networks. The EU Nature Restoration Law, adopted in 2024, creates binding obligations for member states to restore degraded ecosystems — including riparian zones — with specific area targets by 2030 and 2050.

For river corridors in Poland, these EU obligations translate to additional policy pressure on municipalities and regional water authorities to expand and protect riverside green space, reduce impermeable surfaces adjacent to watercourses, and restore natural river morphology where feasible within urban constraints.

Rules for Park Use

Individual park use rules (regulaminy parków) are set by municipal authorities and vary between parks and cities. Common provisions include:

Enforcement is typically handled by municipal guards (straż miejska) rather than specialist park rangers, except in larger parks with dedicated management.