Heanor is a town in the Amber Valley district in Derbyshire, positioned on a hill approximated to be between 65 metres and 125 metres above sea level. The town is within the Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and Yorkshire Coalfield National Character Area, a broad division of landscape forming a basic unit of unified countryside character, on which planning and control of its ecology and landscape can be based. Whilst the town includes no preservation locations, 30 per cent of the region is within a green belt, together with having four wildlife sites and a nature reserve. According to the 2011 census, Heanor, alongside the adjacent village of Loscoe forming the town council administered area of Heanor and Loscoe, had a population of 17251. This makes up 7512 houses and 7221 households. Within this population, 18.7 percent of citizens were under the age of 16, being somewhat lower than the 18.9 percent for England as a whole, and 16.5 percent of Heanor's occupants were aged 65 or over, compared to 16.4 per cent for England as a whole. Heanor includes 10 structures of particular architectural or historic interest, as detailed by Historic England. The Church of St Lawrence, a 15th-century building, is listed as Grade II, and the other 9 structures are all listed as Grade II. For all of your home upgrades, make sure to make use of dependable professionals in Heanor to make certain of quality.