Now 68 ‘Pocket Parks’ will share an extra £1.35million from the Government


Vital green spaces from Northumberland to Cornwall will this week get a share of more than £1 million in the wake of The Mail on Sunday’s Save Our Parks campaign.

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick is set to unveil 68 ‘Pocket Parks’ up and down the country which will get up to £25,000 to transform neglected urban areas or create completely new green zones for their communities.

The Mail on Sunday can reveal the first three winners – Gaydon Meadow in Warwickshire, Edinburgh Road Rocket Park in Chesterfield and Clapham Recreation Ground in West Sussex.

Last night, Stuart Ray – a parish councillor in the West Sussex village – said that he and his colleagues were ‘over the moon’ with the cash award and paid tribute to this newspaper’s campaign to protect vital green spaces.

Two years ago, we revealed how playgrounds were being lost at the rate of nearly two a week as they fell victim to neglect, vandalism or property developers. The broadcaster and gardener Alan Titchmarsh backed our campaign to Save Our Parks.

Children in Clapham, West Sussex, celebrate being awarded funding after the mail on Sunday’s Save Our Parks campaign

And now, as part of a ‘green spaces’ fightback, this week Mr Jenrick will announce the list of ‘Pocket Parks’ across the country which will benefit from a funding boost of £1.35 million.

 

In addition the Communities Secretary has stressed just how important parks and green areas are for ‘our mental and physical health, for helping us connect with nature and each other, and as beautiful, relaxing places’.

Vowing to champion those green lungs, Mr Jenrick, 38, said: ‘With three daughters of my own, I have spent many an hour at my local park, as I did as a child with my parents.

‘Some are serene, some are noisy; some are magical wildernesses, others planned and manicured.

‘That’s why The Mail on Sunday’s Save Our Parks campaign is so important.’

He also spoke of how parks were ‘peculiarly British, from bandstands to bowling greens, and their existence reflects the national obsession with gardening we inherited from the Victorians’. He added: ‘Out of the smallest Pocket Park can grow the seeds of something we all need and value – a sense of space.’ The Government programme is designed to help community groups to transform small local parks and plots of land that have fallen into disrepair.

Mr Jenrick said ‘imaginative schemes’ such as the ones in Warwickshire, Chesterfield and Clapham, West Sussex, ‘combine an impressive commitment to boosting biodiversity and wildlife with improved facilities and better access’.

The broadcaster and gardener Alan Titchmarsh backed our campaign to Save Our Parks

The broadcaster and gardener Alan Titchmarsh backed our campaign to Save Our Parks 

Reacting to the funding news yesterday, Clapham parish council chairman Mr Ray said: ‘We are absolutely over the moon because we lost our playground when the local council said there was not enough money to take care of it. Now we are going to have a fantastic new focal point for the village and somewhere for the kids to play.

‘We are really pleased that we are getting the money from the Pocket Parks scheme and can’t thank The Mail on Sunday enough for your campaign.’

This week’s announcement will mean that over 350 local projects have now benefited, including a play and exercise facility for Thorplands estate in Northampton where the local community have transformed a disused and derelict green space, installing new play equipment and outdoor gym apparatus.

From these seeds, we’ll grow together: ROBERT JENRICK says he is determined to play his part in championing parks and green spaces

From ancient village greens to the great public parks bequeathed to us by the Victorians, we’ve always treasured the opportunity to come together with friends and neighbours in parks on our doorstep.

The benefits they offer for our mental and physical health, for helping us connect with nature and each other and as beautiful, relaxing places cannot be overstated.

With three daughters of my own, I have spent many an hour at my local park, as I did as a child with my parents.

Some are serene, some are noisy; some are magical wildernesses, others planned and manicured.

That’s why the MoS’s Save Our Parks campaign is so important.

And why I’m determined to play my part in championing parks and green spaces, no matter how small, as part of my mission to nurture places that inspire pride, community spirit and belonging. I am therefore delighted to be awarding £1.35 million of funding to 68 projects across England as part of the Pocket Parks programme, taking the total we’ve backed to 352.

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick is set to unveil 68 ‘Pocket Parks’ up and down the country which will get up to £25,000 to transform neglected urban areas

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick is set to unveil 68 ‘Pocket Parks’ up and down the country which will get up to £25,000 to transform neglected urban areas

This will see community groups from Northumberland to Cornwall transforming small parks and plots of land that have fallen into disrepair and bringing them back into use. Many of these imaginative schemes combine an impressive commitment to boosting biodiversity and wildlife with improved facilities and better access.

I hope to see for myself the difference they can make when I visit Waterloo Millennium Green in London – a once-spartan short-cut for locals that’s now a popular Pocket Park. As well as striving to improve the skills of those who look after our parks and developing new models for managing and funding them, we’re exploring how our green spaces can help us address the great challenge of climate change.

Parks and gardens make up around half of all usable green space that’s publicly accessible in this country, a remarkable legacy of our forebears.

They’re peculiarly British, from bandstands to bowling greens, and their existence reflects the national obsession with gardening we inherited from the Victorians.

But they can also be part of our response to the challenges of today. Whether we’re talking about harnessing wind and solar power to generate energy, planting more trees and wildflower meadows to maximise carbon capture, linking parks to create more walking routes or using them for events like Parkrun to get us fit and healthy, it’s clear that our green spaces can be as much about the future as they are a product of our past.

We are committed to making it easier for communities to take back control of valued assets through new initiatives such as the £150 million Community Ownership Fund which will help protect and maintain cherished spaces such as the village pub or community centre.

I want to give people the power to ensure that the places they live in reflect the area’s unique character and culture, are more beautiful and, yes, are greener. Out of the smallest Pocket Park can grow the seeds of something we all need and value – a sense of space.

That’s why I also want to see the re-greening of our cities, with low-carbon homes built as the norm within five years and all streets to be lined with trees in new developments. If that means signing up to be a ‘Tree Angel’, which this paper’s sister daily is commendably campaigning on, then so be it!

I’m determined to help ensure that we pass on our parks and our planet to the next generation richer in biodiversity, more beautiful and more well-loved than when we inherited them.

This can sometimes seem like a challenge that’s simply too big and beyond us. But, as Pocket Parks show, there is no such thing as starting too small.

ROBERT JENRICK is the Communities Secretary