Heart of Hackbridge – Have Your Say, Round Two

Once again members of the Hackbridge community are being asked to come and view designs for Hackbridge Corner and give their feedback. Since the exhibition last February, the Heart of Hackbridge team have been developing the designs for the centre of Hackbridge based on the comments and views collected. Having carefully considered all feedback, detailed designs for Hackbridge Corner have now been completed.

The exhibition, which will be run by BioRegional, Sutton Council and architects Adams and Sutherland, will explain the aims, progress and plans for the Heart of Hackbridge Project and feature the detailed designs for London Road and Hackbridge Corner, and also the designs for the shop exteriors.

The exhibition will start on Monday the 3rd of June and run until Saturday the 8th, to coincide with The Hackbridge Open Day. Local residents will again be able to discuss the plans with members of the Heart of Hackbridge project team and give their thoughts. This is the last chance for people to have their say before the designs are finalised and approved, ready for construction to start in the autumn.

The exhibition at Centrale on London Road (SM6 7EA) will be held at the following times during June 2013:

Monday 3rd 4 – 6pm

Tuesday 4th 1 – 3pm

Wednesday 5th 8 – 10am

Thursday 6th 5 – 7pm

Saturday 8th 11 – 3pm

The Heart of Hackbridge team look forward to hearing your views on the updated designs.

Celebrate UK Inspire Day at One Planet Experience

Wednesday 16th May 2012 is UK Inspire Day – a celebration of the London 2012 Inspire programme – a family of over 2,700 projects across the UK that have been inspired by the Games to do something special in their local communities.
To celebrate UK Inspire Day, BioRegional's One Planet Experience – an Inspire-mark project – will be giving away a free book and London 2012 UK Inspire Day Certificate to everybody that visits on Wednesday 16th May.
The One Planet Experience is an interactive exhibition based at the BedZED visitor centre in Hackbridge, which tells the London 2012 sustainability story to inspire greener lifestyles.
Visitors can find out what London 2012 is doing to be the greenest ever Games, and then try out the carbon calculator house to see how to reduce their energy bills, ride in the energy velodrome to see how many household appliances they can power, find out what happens to their recycling, and test their knowledge on the touchscreen energy and waste quizzes.
Opened last October by local paralympian David Weir, more than 1,000 visitors have passed through the door so far. Track cycling world champion and former Sutton resident Joanna Rowsell said “I have always been passionate about living in a greener way and I am very happy to support the One Planet Experience to inspire everyone to live more sustainably.”
Seb Coe, Chair of the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games said: “UK Inspire Day is a celebration of the Inspire programme and more than 2700 exceptional projects like the One Planet Experience whose events and celebrations this summer will bring the UK to life. We encourage you to go along and experience the inspiration for yourself.”
For those who can’t make it on 16th May, the Experience is open every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 11am to 4pm. For more information contact Stephen Edwards, 020 8404 4896.

16th May 2012 – 11:00am – 4:00pm
The BedZED Visitor Centre
24 Helios Road, Wallington, Surrey, SM6 7BZ   UK

Ministry of Food

In Britain, we don’t like being told what to eat. It can conjure lots of strong feelings when the government pitches in and tells the public not to waste food or celebrities campaign to stop people buying cheap chicken.

If you’re interested in the environment, however, you’re interested in the food on your plate. How far has it travelled? Could you grow it yourself? What has it been sprayed with? How much carbon was used to produce it? We at One Planet Sutton are interested (even excited!) about all those questions – hence our Food Project to help local people grow and buy fresh, local produce.  

So it was fascinating to visit the Ministry of Food exhibition at the Imperial War Museum in London. During the Second World War, the government needed to start talking to people about what food they were eating and the impact it had. The more food that was imported, the more merchant ships needed to cross the Atlantic in danger from German U-boats. The more intensively it was farmed, the more petrol and metal was taken away from the war effort. The more food that was wasted, the more lives were in danger, simple as that. 

While we’re not at war or under rationing, the exhibition conjured some really interesting thoughts. First, how quickly the country could turn around from 40% imports to being almost self-sufficient, despite doing most farming by hand. The number of allotment holders and keen amateur gardeners that sprang up is testament to what people can do if they believe in the need for something. And that legacy continued after the war and after rationing was finished.

Second, that people we healthier under rationing than they had been before, by eating a balanced, high fibre, low meat diet – the same whether you were rich or poor.  The government had a big part to play in this, through education and information.

And third, that I’m very glad that I’ve never had to do some of the things with spam that our grandmothers did…

So it turns out that growing your own food, eating seasonal fruit and vegetables, reducing imports, recycling and healthy nutrition were just as topical in 60 years ago as they are today – though for very different reasons. And we aren’t limited to one egg a week…

The Ministry of Food exhibition at the Imperial Ward Museum, Lambeth, runs to 3 January.