0 historic sites 0 scheduled monuments 0 listed buildings

ANDERSONSTOWN covers 2.9 km² in Northern Ireland. Per 1,000 residents, this works out at 0.0 recorded sites — the 0th percentile across NI wards (a measure of heritage density relative to current population).

Detailed boundary map of ANDERSONSTOWN ward, Belfast
ANDERSONSTOWN boundary detail
Regional context map showing ANDERSONSTOWN ward within Belfast
ANDERSONSTOWN in regional context

Heritage at a glance

Percentile rankings throughout this profile compare each ward only against the other 461 Northern Ireland wards.

0
Historic sites
3rd percentile
0
Scheduled monuments
17th percentile
0
Listed buildings
2nd percentile
0.00
Sites per km²

Population context

1587
Persons per km²
94th percentile
0.0
Sites per 1,000 residents
0th percentile
4,602
Total residents (2021)

The recorded heritage of ANDERSONSTOWN

No historic sites, scheduled monuments, or listed buildings are recorded for this ward in the source registers (NISMR, HED scheduled monuments database, HED Historic Buildings Record). This may reflect genuine absence or limits of survey coverage; absence in these registers cannot be interpreted as evidence of historical absence of activity.

Terrain and environment

Mean elevation of 30m sits around the NI median (23th percentile). Mean slope is 3.2° (21th percentile across NI), giving moderately undulating terrain. The Topographic Wetness Index of 10.8 (69th NI percentile) indicates moderate drainage, balanced between upland shedding and lowland accumulation. The land-cover mosaic combines urban land (62%), woodland (26%), and improved grassland (12%), giving a mixed agricultural and semi-natural landscape. In overall character, this is low-lying, gently-sloping terrain — characteristic of NI's lowland basins and coastal plains, with land use dominated by urban land.

Terrain measurements

Mean elevation29.9 m 24th pct
Max elevation51.8 m 15th pct
Mean slope3.2° 22nd pct
Wetness index (TWI)10.77 70th pct
Grassland11.8% 9th pct
Woodland25.5% 71st pct
Urban land62.2% 93rd pct

Where this ward sits in NI

Elevation
24th
Slope
22nd
Drainage
70th
Grassland
9th
Woodland
71st

Geology and preservation

The dominant bedrock formed during the Mesozoic era (Triassic period). Rock formed during the age of dinosaurs; in NI this typically appears as Triassic mudstones and Jurassic clays now buried beneath younger deposits. Bedrock composition is varied (complexity index 0.87, on a 0-1 Simpson-style scale), with multiple geological units within the ward boundary. Geologically diverse wards historically offered a wider range of stone types for building, toolmaking, and quarrying — a relevant factor when interpreting the material culture of nearby sites.

Bedrock eraMesozoic
Bedrock periodTriassic
Surface depositsTill
Peat coverage0.0%
Bedrock complexity0.87

Placename evidence

Just two placenames are recorded for this ward in the combined OSNI, Logainm NI, and GeoNames sources. That is too few to support any meaningful characterisation of the linguistic heritage layers — diagnostic categories such as ecclesiastical, defensive, or Plantation-era names need a larger sample to be reliably distinguished from the generic Gaelic landscape vocabulary that is common throughout Ireland.

Discover more in Belfast

Grounding History report mockup

Want a deeper view?

Grounding History: 10 Maps of Northern Ireland’s Past

A spatial history report bringing together analysis of all 462 wards into one place through 10 high-quality maps — covering monument density, archaeological periods, placename heritage, terrain, wetland, and the historic landscape at first survey.

About this profile

What is a ward?

A ward is the smallest electoral and statistical geography used by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA). The boundaries used here are the 2014 NISRA / OSNI Wards (462 across Northern Ireland), each typically covering 1-700 km² and a population of a few thousand. Wards do not align with parishes, townlands, or any historic administrative unit — they are a modern statistical convenience, used here only as a fixed spatial frame within which to summarise heritage records.

What counts as a site?

Three distinct heritage record types are reported separately, not combined: (1) Historic Sites — entries in the Northern Ireland Sites and Monuments Record (NISMR), the inventory of recorded archaeological sites and findspots, dated from prehistoric to early-modern; (2) Scheduled Monuments — sites legally protected under the Historic Monuments and Archaeological Objects (NI) Order 1995 and maintained by the Historic Environment Division (HED); (3) Listed Buildings — buildings of architectural or historic interest protected under the Planning Act (NI) 2011 and graded A, B+, B1, B2, or Record-Only by HED. A site appearing in more than one register is counted in each register independently.

Editorial principles

These ward profiles describe evidence, not history. They report what is recorded, not what occurred. Where the data is ambiguous, we say so. We do not infer historical processes — population movements, settlement expansion, periods of decline — from patterns in the record. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence: in Northern Ireland, where antiquarian survey was uneven and modern excavation is geographically biased, a gap in the record almost always reflects the limits of recording rather than a genuine historical absence. We mark such gaps explicitly where they appear in the data.

Limits of coverage and known caveats

Several caveats apply to every ward profile: (1) NISMR coverage is uneven across NI — some areas (notably parts of the south-east and the Belfast urban fringe) have been more intensively surveyed than others, so a low recorded site count does not reliably indicate a low past density of activity; (2) period attributions in NISMR are often 'Unknown', and chronological breakdowns reported here reflect only the dated subset; (3) placename classification depends on the Irish-language form (name_ga), which is recorded for approximately 50% of NI placenames in the combined sources, so ecclesiastical and pre-Christian counts may be understated where anglicised forms remain unparsed; (4) terrain percentile ranks compare each ward only to the other 461 NI wards; they are not absolute thresholds. For absence-dominant land cover categories (wetland, water, cropland), percentile ranks are suppressed below 1% raw value, since the ranking of zero-value wards is not meaningful.

Data sources (11)
Spotted an error? This dataset is updated continuously. Email contact@danielkirkpatrick.co.uk with corrections, missing records, or suggestions for improvement.