| Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden: The garden was an essential part of Hepworth's creative process and when she died it opened to the public as a permanent setting to exhibit her works. Since 1980 the Tate has managed both studio and garden. St Ives, Cornwall. |
| Bollard Awareness Clinic: Project decorating bollards in the styles of major artists. Winchester. |
| Broomhill Sculpture Park: Provided by the Broomhill Art Hotel and Gallery in Barnstaple, Devon. Visitor details and virtual tour. |
| Chiltern Sculpture Trail: The trail is a woodland setting which houses around twenty site related sculptures by contemporary artists. Situated on the border of Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire, UK. |
| Coventry Canal Society: Art Trail: Features twenty sculptures on a linear trail between Hawkesbury and the city basin. |
| Cywaith Cymru, Artworks Wales: The national organisation for public art in Wales, with details of artists, projects, commissions and locations. In Welsh and English. |
| Forest of Dean Sculpture Trail: Sculpture trail situated on the border between England and South Wales. Includes a catalogue of the artists represented, a history of the project and full visitor information. |
| Glenkiln Reservoir Sculptures: An illustrated description of a walk around Glenkiln reservoir, where Sir William Keswick placed sculptures by Auguste Rodin, Jacob Epstein and Henry Moore. [Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland] |
| Grizedale Arts: Arts organisation with woodland sculpture park based in the Grizedale Forest in the Lake District. Details of annual events, artists, visitor details and history. |
| Hannah Peschar Sculpture Garden: 10 acre landscaped garden in Surrey, UK, houses an extensive and ever changing collection of contemporary sculpture by over 100 artists. |
| Ironbridge Open Air Museum: Outdoor museum of steel sculpture in Ironbridge, Shropshire. |
| Meadow Gallery: Contemporary arts organisation in South Shropshire with three acre outdoor sculpture gallery featuring both changing and permanent work. Near Ludlow. |
| New Art Centre Sculpture Park and Gallery: Specialising in work from 1950 onwards. Information on current exhibition and holdings from estate of Barbara Hepworth. |
| Newnham Paddox Art Park: The Earl of Denbigh's Art Park at Newnham Paddox, Warwickshire: where the Capability Brown Landscape offers classical and contemporary sculpture to view or buy. |
| Norton Priory Sculpture Trail: Collection of over 20 sculptures illustrating artists' individual responses to Norton Priory. Includes works by Diane Gorvin, Adrian Moakes and Phil Bews. Near Runcorn in North West England. |
| On Form Sculpture: Biennial exhibition of stone sculpture hosted in the grounds of seventeenth century Asthall Manor, Oxfordshire. |
| Perry Green: The spacious sculpture gardens and adjoining fields house an ever-changing exhibition of Henry Moore's monumental sculptures. |
| Portland Sculpture and Quarry Trust: Tout Quarry on the cliffs above Lyme Bay with views to the Devon Coast is a labyrinth revealing sculpture either carved into the rockface or constructed from shale within the quarry landscape itself. |
| Pride of the Valley Sculpture Park: Sculptures in rural surroundings in Surrey. Sculptors, examples of their work, location and virtual tour. |
| Public Art Research Archive: Sheffield Hallam University resource on public art in Sheffield and elsewhere in the UK. Includes links to specific artists, locations, temporary pieces, articles, conferences and awards. |
| Sculpture at Goodwood: Sculpture organisation and outdoor museum devoted to the promotion of 21st century British sculpture through public commissions and exhibitions. |
| Storey Gallery: The Tasting Garden: Permanent environmental artwork by Mark Dion, part orchard and part artwork. Lancaster. |
| Sustrans: Art & The Travelling Landscape: National Cycle Network organisation works with artists to provide sequences of artworks as permanent installations on cycleways. Details of collections, locations and artists. |
| Yorkshire Sculpture Park: Provides a changing programme of exhibitions, displays and projects ithroughout 500 acres of eighteenth century landscaped grounds and three indoor galleries. |