Published By Transport for London (TfL)
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Data provided by Transport for London on journeys undertaken by underground and bus. The data are provided on the basis of 13 periods per year and are adjusted for odd days. Series shown include moving averages to analyse longer term trends. * * * [![](http://public.tableausoftware.com/static/images/tf/tfl_passengers/Dashboard1/1_rss.png)](http://data.london.gov.uk/transport-for-london-passenger-journeys/)
Published By Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Table](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/workplace-employment-sector-borough.xls) showing numbers of people who work in an area by public/private sector and whether full-time or part-time. Data from Business Register Employment Survey (BRES, ONS) Employment is defined as employees plus working proprietors Figures may not add up due to rounding. Figures are rounded to the nearest thousand and to one decimal place. For example 2.4 is equal to 2,400 employment, and represents a figure in the range 2,350 - 2,449. Employees - An employee is anyone aged 16 years or over that an organisation directly pays from its payroll(s), in return for carrying out a full-time or part-time job or being on a training scheme. It excludes voluntary workers, self-employed and working owners who are not paid via PAYE Working Proprietors are sole traders, sole proprietors, partners and directors. This does not apply to registered charities Employment = employees + working proprietors Part time - those working 30 hours or less per week Full time - those working more than 30 hours per week The private sector is defined as: Company, Sole Proprietor, Partnership and Non Profit Body or Mutual Association. Public sector employees are those in: Public corporations/ Nationalised Bodies, Central Government and Local Authority. See BRES pages on [ONS Website](http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/bus-register/business-register-employment-survey/index.html), or download from [NOMIS](https://www.nomisweb.co.uk/query/select/getdatasetbytheme.asp?theme=27)
Published By London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Payments over £250 made by [London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority](http://www.london-fire.gov.uk/) as part of the Government's transparency agenda. As of November 2012 the threshold for expenditure has changed from £500 to £250.
Published By Civil Aviation Authority
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
The CAA collects statistics from all United Kingdom airlines. Monthly aggregate information is supplied on each route served together with quarterly returns of fleet and personnel data and, for the major carriers, annual standardised profit and loss accounts and balance sheets. Reports are provided each month. London airports are deemed to be: Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted and City airports only. Data are initially released on a provisional basis and may subsequently be revised. [![](http://public.tableausoftware.com/static/images/ai/airports_0/Dashboard1/1_rss.png)](http://data.london.gov.uk/passengers-at-london-airports/)
Published By Department of Energy and Climate Change
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Estimates of total final energy consumption by sector. Energy consumption from domestic, transport and industrial source broken down by key energy type (coal, gas, petroleum products, manufactured fuels, renewables and electricity). Data is measured in Gwh Ktoe - Kilotonnes of Oil Equivalent. GWh - Gigawatt Hours. [Visit the DECC website](https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/energy-statistics-for-local-authorities)
Published By Department for Work and Pensions
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Data about the ‘key’ benefits for clients are merged together to create “Client Group” data, providing information about whether a client is on more than one benefit from the following list: Bereavement Benefit, Carer’s Allowance, Disability Living Allowance, Employment and Support Allowance (from November 2008), Incapacity Benefit/Severe Disablement Allowance, Income Support, Jobseeker’s Allowance, Pension Credit, State Pension and Widow’s Benefit. Benefits are arranged hierarchically and claimants are assigned to the topmost benefit which they receive.
Published By Department for Transport
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Casualties](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/road-casualties-severity-borough.xls) on the roads by severity (Killed/seriously injured or slight injuries) for both child and all casualties by borough since 2004. A child is anyone aged 17 and under. Data presented is for personal injury road traffic collisions occurring on the public highway, and reported to the police, in accordance with the Stats 19 national reporting system. Also available: Casualties on the roads by LSOA, MSOA and Ward by severity for years 2010 to 2013. **Incident level data:** Casualty data for all road accidents 2010 to 2013 are also available for **individual incident level** in CSV format (11 MB and 87k rows). There are slight differences between the local authority recorded in the official DFT data and this one, which has been geo-coded using the Easting and Northing of the accident. When an accident happens on a borough boundary it is down to the police officer to decide which borough the accident occured in. However, this data uses uses the centre points of the Easting and Northing provided and this can fall into a different local authority. For this reason, the geography in the geo-coded data is not official but does provide indicative information. Incident level data from 2005 onwards is available from [TFL](https://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/publications-and-reports/road-safety) ('data extracts').
Published By Department for Work and Pensions
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Pension Credit was introduced in October 2003. It is an entitlement for people aged 60 and over living in Great Britain, designed to give extra help to the poorest pensioners and also to reward those savers with low or modest incomes who missed out under the previous system. It is not necessary to have paid National Insurance contributions to be eligible. Pension Credit replaced the Minimum Income Guarantee (MIG), which, itself, replaced Income Support for older people in April 1999. However, the principle of a guaranteed minimum income continues to apply. There are two parts to Pension Credit: the guarantee credit and the savings credit. The guarantee credit provides financial help for people aged 60 or over whose income is below a certain level set by the law. The level that applies depends on personal circumstances; this is the standard minimum guarantee. The awarded amount will depend on other sources of income, such as other pensions and savings. Extra amounts will be added to the standard minimum guarantee for those who have: relevant housing costs severe disabilities caring responsibilities The savings credit is an extra amount for people aged 65 or over who have made some provision for their retirement (such as savings or a second pension) which brings their income above a level set by Parliament, called the ‘savings credit threshold’. The aim is to reward pensioners who have modest income or savings. A savings credit can be given on top of a guarantee credit. Claimants may still get a savings credit even if their income is above the standard minimum guarantee level.
Published By Land Registry
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Mean and median property prices](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/house-prices-borough-ward-lsoa-msoa.xls) from all price paid data published on Land Registry website. Number of property sales also included. Number of Census 2011 dwellings has been included for context. The Census dwellings figure takes no account of tenure of dwellings in an area ie the actual housing stock that could be sold. Data for all years from 1995-2013. 2013 data is currently provisional - marked with a (p) LSOA and MSOA 2011 boundaries and codes used. Postcode data converted into boundary codes using GIS Entries in the land registry database marked with a 'D' have been removed from calculations. No other entries have been removed. This data has been calculated directly from Land Registry files and figures at borough level will not match official published figures for house prices. Borough figures are provided here for comparison purposes. Caution should be used when analysing figures based on a low number of sales, particularly in the LSOA dataset. Download from [Land Registry](http://www.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/public-data/price-paid-data)
Published By Department for Work and Pensions
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
The State Pension was first introduced on 1 January 1909. The foundation of a universal contribution-related basic State Pension was laid in the 1940s. There are two main types of State Pension: contributory and non-contributory. Contributory State Pension consists of any combination of a Basic Pension (BP), Additional Pension (AP) or Graduated Retirement Benefit (GRB). Non- contributory pension consists of a Basic Pension plus any Graduated Retirement Benefit that is due.
Published By Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
This [table](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/country-of-birth-london.xls) shows resident population broken down into country of birth, showing data for London's largest communities (over 10,000 people) in 2004, and 2008 to 2013 from the Annual Population Survey (APS). The 2011 Census data is also provided in the spreadsheet to provide a comparison to the APS data. The table also shows the percentage of the UK community that live in London. The Annual Population Survey (APS) sampled around 325,000 people in the UK (around 28,000 in London). As such all figures must be treated with some caution. 95% confidence interval levels are provided. **All populations of fewer than 10,000 have been suppressed.** Numbers are rounded to the nearest thousand. The APS is the only inter-censal data source that can provide estimates of the population stock by nationality. The data have a range of limitations, particularly in relation to their poor coverage of short-term migrants or recent arrivals. They also struggle to provide estimates for small migrant populations due to small sample sizes. Information about Londoners by Country of Birth using APS data, can be found in DMAG Briefing 2008-05 http://legacy.london.gov.uk/gla/publications/factsandfigures/dmag-briefing-2008-05.pdf
Published By Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Live births by usual residence of mother, and General Fertility Rates (GFR), and Deaths and Standardised Mortality Ratio (SMR) by ward and local authority. The births and deaths data comes from ONS Vital Statistics Table 4. Small area data is only available directly from ONS under licence. The general fertility rate (GFR) is the number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15-44. SMR measures whether the population of an area has a higher or lower number of deaths than expected based on the age profile of the population (more deaths are expected in older populations). The SMR is defined as follows: SMR = (Observed no. of deaths per year)/(Expected no. of deaths per year). Rates are provisional, they are based on the GLA 2011 based SHLAA ward projections (standard) released in January 2012. At national level, however, they are based on the mid-year population estimates. More information is on the [ONS website](http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/vsob1/birth-summary-tables--england-and-wales/2011--final-/sb-births-and-deaths-in-england-and-wales--2011--final-.html). Related to: http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/publications/re-reference-tables.html?edition=tcm%3A77-276693
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
An Excel workbook containing tables of historical census data for a range of indicators dating back to 1961. Available in Excel 2003 (csv download) and Excel 2007-10 (excel download) formats.
Published By Land Registry
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Average annual and quarterly house prices](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/average-house-prices-borough.xls) based on Land Registry data, by borough. Lower and Upper quartile prices are included in the table. Quarterly Lower Quartile data is taken from DCLG Table 583 up to Q3 2011. All other data is from Land Registry. Excluded from the above figures are sales at less than market price (e.g. Right To Buy), sales below £1,000 and sales above £20m. The "median" property price is determined by ranking all property prices in ascending order. The median is the mid-point of this ranking with 50 per cent of prices below the median and 50 per cent above The figures for the latest quarter are provisional and figures for all other quarters have been revised. Data from CLG Table numbers: 581, 582, 585 and 586. From the 1st of November 2012 DCLG no longer publishes this data at regional level. Now also includes monthly data from the Land Registry. Also available are [Average house prices for London, by borough, ward, LSOA and MSOA](/datastore/package/average-house-prices-ward-lsoa-msoa), based on GLA calculations of Land Registry [price paid datasets](http://www.landregistry.gov.uk/market-trend-data/public-data/price-paid-data). **Price Paid Datasets** The full land registry price paid datasets are available to download here. This shows details of each house sale since 1995 in England and Wales. The files are broken down into smaller chunks to make it possible to open in Excel2010. The England and Wales files contain the following fields: unique_id price date Post code Property type Whether newbuild Freehold Address1 Town Local_authority County Record_status Year Month Quarter Region Country The London files contain the following fields: id (London) transaction_id Price Date_processed Quarter Month Year Year_month Post_code Property_type Whether_new Tenure Address1 Address2 Address3 Address4 Town Local_authority County Record_status Post_code_clean Inner_outer Borough_code Borough_name Ward_code Ward_name MSOA11 LSOA11 OA11 Download (Beware: large file sizes): [England and Wales 1995-2013](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/E&W House Prices since 1995-CSV.zip) (Zip) 911MB [London 1995-2013](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/London price paid house price data since 1995 CSV.zip) (Zip) 190MB NB Files correct to end of March 2014. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/house-price-index-background-tables https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/live-tables-on-housing-market-and-house-prices
Published By Department for Transport
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Road Collisions Data by fatal, serious or slight severity casualty groups. An collision is classed by the worst level of casualty. For example if an accident caused 1 slight injury, 2 serious injuries, and 1 fatality, the collision would be classed as fatal. Road casualty statistics can be found at a separate [page](/datastore/package/road-casualties-severity-borough). Accident and casualty data can also be found using the DFT's [web based data analysis tool](http://road-collisions.dft.gov.uk/). See more on the [UKDA website](http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/) and the [DfT website](http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/statistics/datatablespublications/accidents/).
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Reports and data on the migrant population.
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Reports and data on Housing.
Published By Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Estimates of London's population between 1801 and 2001 (persons present 1801 to 1991 and residents for 2001 onwards) derived from historic Census data. Sources: years to 1971 - Greater London Council Research [Memorandum 413](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/Research-Memorandum-413.pdf), The Changing Population of the London Boroughs; 1981 Census Small Area Statistics, Table 1; 1991 Census Small Area Statistics, Table 1. Figure for Year-1939 is a mid-year estimate for the year 1939. Figure for Year-2001 onwards is the number of residents because the number of persons present is not available from 2001. Note that totals for Greater London may not match due to rounding errors. Figures are estimates to the nearest thousand.
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Reports and data on Diversity
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
A series of fact sheets, one for each of the 18 ethnic groups reported in the census, containing range of data on topics ranging from housing to nationality and economic activity to religion.
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Reports and data on Health, Illness and unpaid care
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Reports and data on the Labour Market and Qualifications
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
All of the 2011 Census univariate tables for London and England & Wales in one place.
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Reports and data on households and families
Published By Census Information Scheme
Issued almost 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Reports on data processing and data quality