Westminster Community Awards
We are thrilled to be shortlisted in the Westminster Community Awards under the category of ‘Better City, Better Lives’.
The ceremony is Thursday 5th June 2014. Keep your fingers crossed for us.
Westminster Community Awards
We are thrilled to be shortlisted in the Westminster Community Awards under the category of ‘Better City, Better Lives’.
The ceremony is Thursday 5th June 2014. Keep your fingers crossed for us.
Wildlife Area Session 12th April 2014
This weekend we found, what seemed like thousands, Sycamore seedlings round the wildflowers.
If not removed, these seedlings will grow into saplings with deep roots.
Unfortunately, the most efficient method of removing these seedlings is by hand.
Here, Simon is removing bindweed which has grown in a short space of time.
Here, Anne is pruning dead flower heads (daffodils), a process of removing dying or dead flowered heads giving the plant a chance of flowering again.
If you are interested in helping out for a few hours in our Wildlife Area, please come along to our next session. Click for dates and times.
Gallery Photos
Westminster Tree Planting Ceremony 28th March 2014
Actor Edward Fox showed his support for the Westminster Tree Trust tree planting effort by helping plant the last of more than two dozen trees planned for Maida Vale.
Mr Fox and schoolchildren from the Wilberforce Primary School picked up shovels and congregated on Harrow Road to mark the completion of the first phase of the tree planting programme.
Westminster Tree Trust and local community groups have been working together for the last six months to plant 25 trees stretching from Maida Hill to Ladbroke Grove.
LGC column Nov 21 by Susanna Rustin
Success! Queen’s Park Community Council won’t exist for another six months, yet we’ve managed to raise £60,000 to fund improvements to our well-loved but ill-equipped local playground. We submitted a joint application with Westminster City Council back in the summer, following meetings that brought together members of the parish council development group, Friends of Queen’s Park Gardens, the council parks department, ward councillors and the landscaping company that looks after open spaces in the borough. The discussions and form-filling took hours. I danced across my office when we learned it had all been worth it.
Sita Trust, the charitable wing of waste and recycling company Sita, is the source of this much needed investment in play equipment for the 7+ age group, and I can’t tell you have pleasing it is to have embarked on the process of spending this money. Back in January an old but serviceable steel climbing frame was removed from the park without warning. Disbelief turned to anger as local parents including me realised there was no plan to replace it. We organised a petition and the local paper published before-and-after pictures, the latter a depressing tableau of bare earth and disgruntled children swaddled in hats and scarves against the freezing weather.
But once we had identified Sita Trust’s Enhancing Communities fund as a plausible solution we established a good relationship with Westminster officials. They have embraced some if not all our notions of what the new playground might be, and we are confident that when it is completed next year it will be vastly better. In keeping with the community council’s commitment to maximising engagement, we are planning a focus group at a local school and a consultation that goes beyond notices pinned up with an email address to write to.
Bringing investment into our neighbourhood was always part of the plan for the community council. As yet we have no formal target, but in order to justify the additional tax residents will pay to fund the council, we need to show we can raise money as well as spend it.
So far so good. We have shown we can put a good pitch together. But while no one could begrudge the kids of Queen’s Park a decent play area – our ward is around two-thirds social housing with pockets of acute deprivation – it worries me to think of all the other areas suffering budget cuts, particularly to facilities for children, that won’t be so lucky. I hope Queen’s Park Community Council will prove to be an innovative, sustainable, entrepreneurial response to the public sector cuts that brought about our campaign in the first place. But we are not the solution.
If you are interested in helping out for a few hours in our Wildlife Area, please come along to our next session. Click for dates and times.
Gallery Photos
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Wildlife Area 5th October 2013
Alex and Fabian in front of the willow dome surveying the accomplishments from our last visit.
New team member Fabian and Anne getting stuck into clearing unwanted weeds.
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King of the Hill Tony.
Another task today was relocating the wood chips from the front gardens to the willow dome. No shortage of willpower but with one wheelbarrow it still took a long time.
Tony came up with the idea of filling a large white sack with wood chips while Alex emptied the wheelbarrow.
Cleaned up area, ready for next week.
If you are interested in helping out for a few hours in our Wildlife Area, please come along to our next session. Click for dates and times.
Gallery Photos
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Wildlife Area visit 13th July 2013. A glorious sunny day for working in the garden. The willow dome is looking a little over grown since our last visit.
We do have some life appearing in the meadow since sowing this area.>
We had a special visit by the The Reverend David Ackerman from the Parish Church of Saint John the Evangelist.
Wildlife Area 28th September 2013
Photos from our latest visit to the Wildlife Area.
Members of the A-team surveying work to be done.
“Have we bitten off too much?”
We decided to focus on a more manageable area…..
Alex and Stacy preparing the ground before laying wood chips….
Katie takes her work very seriously. There are no weeds left after Katie finished….
Finished for another day…. The A-Team prepare to leave
If you are interested in helping out for a few hours in our Wildlife Area, please come along to our next session. Click for dates and times.
Gallery Photos
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This project has transformed an underused patch of land on the Mozart Estate into 14 community allotments to allow residents to grow their own fruit and vegetables in an area with limited green space.
We needed to finish seeding the wildflower meadow such that it could be ready by the summer festival so we decided to work both Saturday and Sunday. Some of use slept well on Sunday night.
The section that was seeded last time seems to be sprouting.
Working on a new section.
Another section completed!
All done for the day.<
Some of the daisies in the meadow.