Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'The English Lake District' has mentioned 'Park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The Lake District National Park includes all of the central Lake District, though the town of Kendal, some coastal areas, and the Lakeland Peninsulas are outside the park boundary.
[10] The park extends just over 32 miles (51xc2xa0km) from east to west and nearly 40 miles (64xc2xa0km) from north to south,[11] with areas such as the Lake District Peninsulas to the south lying outside the National Park.
The A595 (linking the A66 with the A5092) forms the park boundary from Calder Bridge to Holmrook, then crosses the coastal plain of the park until turning inland at the Whicham Valley, forming much of the park boundary again until joining the A5092 at Grizebeck.
The Cumbrian Coast line has three stations within the boundaries of the national park (and additionally Drigg, about a third of a mile from the park boundary).
The district also extends to the tidal waters of Morecambe Bay and several of its estuaries alongside the Furness and Cartmel Peninsulas, designated on M6 motorway signposts as the "Lake District Peninsulas", and the southern portions of which lie outside the park.
Tourism has now become the park's major industry, with about 12xc2xa0million visitors each year, mainly from the UK's larger settlements, China, Japan, Spain, Germany and the US.
The story is based at a fictionalised version of the remote hill farm of Lawson Park, overlooking Coniston Water.
The base of contemporary art commissioner and residency base Grizedale Arts since 2007, Lawson Park now hosts artists' residencies, opens to the public on occasion, and has developed a significant garden that includes art works alongside extensive plantings.
Grizedale Arts has produced many internationally significant cultural projects and has proved instrumental in the careers of several Turner Prize-winning artists, making Laure Provoust's winning installation 'Wantee' at Lawson Park, and bringing the exhibition to Coniston's Ruskin Museum in 2013.