Center Parcs Sherwood Forest
Center Parcs Sherwood Forest is one of the most popular short-break holiday resorts in the United Kingdom, operated by the Center Parcs company and situated deep within the ancient Nottinghamshire woodland of Sherwood Forest. The resort offers a distinctive concept that has proven enormously successful across Europe: families and groups rent self-catering lodges or villas set among mature trees, with the site deliberately designed so that the natural environment is the backdrop rather than something incidental to the experience. At its heart is the famous Subtropical Swimming Paradise, a vast indoor water park that keeps the resort viable year-round regardless of Britain's famously unpredictable weather. The combination of outdoor forest activities — cycling, archery, segway trails, climbing — with comfortable modern accommodation and that all-weather centrepiece makes it a particularly compelling destination for families with children, though couples and groups of friends make up a significant share of visitors too.
The resort sits within the broader area historically known as Sherwood Forest, a woodland of immense cultural significance in English history and legend. This is the landscape forever associated with Robin Hood and his Merry Men, the outlaw who famously robbed from the rich to give to the poor and whose story has been retold in countless ballads, plays, films and television series spanning many centuries. The medieval royal forest once covered a vast swathe of Nottinghamshire and was a hunting ground for English kings, with Nottingham Castle serving as a regional seat of power. While the forest has shrunk dramatically from its medieval extent, the area still contains ancient oak woodland, and the famous Major Oak — reputedly Robin Hood's shelter and one of the oldest and largest oak trees in Britain — stands at Edwinstowe just a few miles from the Center Parcs site. The resort thus sits within a genuinely storied landscape that gives even a commercial holiday park a certain romantic and historical weight.
Physically, the Center Parcs Sherwood Forest site has the feel of a secluded woodland village that has been carefully threaded between the trees rather than imposed upon them. Pinewood Drive and the internal road network are narrow and deliberately quiet, as private cars are largely excluded from the site after check-in, meaning the dominant sounds are birdsong, the hum of cycling wheels on tarmac paths, children's laughter and the distant rush of wind through the canopy. The lodges are typically clad in timber or rendered in natural tones, with many featuring hot tubs on private decks overlooking the trees. The overall aesthetic is one of Scandinavian-influenced forest living — Nordic in spirit, if Nottinghamshire in location. In autumn the forest colours are particularly striking, while in winter the site takes on a hushed, almost magical quality, especially when decorated for the Christmas season.
The surrounding landscape beyond the resort's perimeter is a mosaic of farmland, remnant ancient woodland, and small Nottinghamshire villages. The village of Edwinstowe, immediately nearby, is a charming settlement with the Church of St Mary where, according to tradition, Robin Hood and Maid Marian were married — a claim that draws visitors seeking a connection to the legend. Rufford Abbey Country Park, a short drive away, offers beautiful grounds around the ruins of a Cistercian abbey. Clumber Park, managed by the National Trust, provides thousands of acres of parkland, lake and woodland for walking and cycling. The wider area represents the quieter, less-visited heart of the East Midlands, and the market town of Ollerton is the nearest substantial settlement for everyday supplies beyond the resort.
Getting to Center Parcs Sherwood Forest is straightforward for those travelling by car, which remains the overwhelming majority of guests. The site lies close to the A614, a main road connecting Nottingham to the north, and signage is clear from surrounding routes. The nearest motorway connections are via the M1 to the west and the A1 to the east, both within reasonable driving distance. Nottingham itself is roughly 20 miles to the south, while Worksop and Ollerton are much closer. Public transport access is more limited, as is the case with most Center Parcs resorts in the UK, and guests arriving without cars should plan carefully, as the nearest train stations at Worksop or Newark-on-Trent still require onward travel. The resort operates a strict check-in system, typically on Mondays and Fridays for short breaks, and accommodation books up many months in advance, particularly for school holiday periods. Visiting in the shoulder seasons — late autumn or early spring — tends to offer a quieter, more affordable experience while still giving full access to all facilities.
One of the more fascinating aspects of Center Parcs as a concept is its Dutch origin: the first Center Parcs resort opened in the Netherlands in 1967, founded by Piet Derksen, with the philosophy of immersing guests in nature while protecting that same nature from the kind of development that might otherwise destroy it. The Sherwood Forest site opened in 1987 and was one of the earliest in the UK estate, helping to establish the brand's British identity. The company has changed ownership several times over the decades, passing through various private equity and corporate hands, and in recent years there has been renewed investment in the estate. A particularly notable quirk is that the resort operates its own internal network of rules — no cars after arrival, a culture of cycling, and a managed timetable of activities — creating a kind of temporary society with its own rhythms that guests often find unexpectedly charming after initial adjustment. The combination of ancient English forest, Robin Hood mythology, Scandinavian design philosophy, and Dutch corporate origins gives this corner of Nottinghamshire a quietly cosmopolitan backstory that its woodland setting does little to advertise.