Monday 24 April 2023

If you go down to Roundwood today, you're sure of a big surprise...

 Aerial view of the southern edge of Roundwood Park (Bowling Green in centre)

I certainly got a big surprise when I visited the Gardening Club and other activity areas on the edge of Roundwood Park on Thursday at the invitation of Katie Mills of social enterprise Forest and Family. Full of passion and energy Katie has a vision for this space that already includes an independent gardening club, a Nature Connection Centre where events, talks and half-term activities are held and a Forest School area in a woodland glade. Working with children and their families from diverse backgrounds they reconnect with nature in an era of keyboards and screens.

 


The Gardening Club, made up of volunteers, even have their own resident poet in the person of Susan Carberry and I arrived just in time for a tea break and Susan's reading of one of her poems from her booklet Eternal Ephemera. (On sale in the Roundwood Cafe to raise funds for the Gardening Club)


 Susan told me of the benefits of the Gardening Club. It combines physical hard work, poetry, and socialising and in the process opens up new horizons for participants. People with little previous exposure to poetry become interested in Susan's poetry and that of other poets that she shares with the group, leading to a developing interest in literature.  Susan said that being: 'It fires me up to write!'

The hard work was visible in the garden area with its recently planted orchard, herb and strawberry raised bed and other beds being prepared for planting.

A toddler investigates the orchard

Raised beds

Weeding the herb and strawberry bed

Getting out the compost for use in the potting shed


Seedlings were being hardened off outside

Also in the Cafe compound is the Nature Connection Centre that can be used for events, work with children and all sorts of other possibilities.


A woodland garden is being developed behind the cafe


Beyond the Cafe area, walking towards Longstone Avenue, a tall fence and shrubbery conceals a bowling green and pavilion. Like that at Edward VII Park in Wembley it has fallen into disuse. The green has recently been mown and I understand that the pavilion, although currently full of rubbish, has a kitchen, centre space, toilets and changing rooms attached. It clearly has great potential, and it is a pity to see, in a borough lacking in green space, that it is unused.

But there is hope. Brent Council intend to lease it out and a consortium consisting of Forest and Family, the Scouts and others are interested in making an application.

The Bowling Green

The Pavilion

Walking on from the bowling green you come upon an asphalt path which used to be a vehicle entrance to the bowling green and next to it the children's playground currently being refurbished with the rather garish equipment common to most Brent Parks.

However,there is another surprise at the end of the asphalt path. The rustic entrance to semi-woodland that is used as the Forest School with visits from local primary pupils, enabling them to get in touch with nature and immerse themselves in activities. Katie Mills has brought the previously abused area back into positive use and given the right arrangements with Brent Council it could have a fully sustainable future and contribute to the Council's Climate Emergency Strategy and engagement with young people.

What child would not be thrilled to enter through this gate?



Another of Katie's projects, which has become a national outdoor campaign but runs locally with the cooperation of Brent Libraries, is Stories by Moonlight. Participants get an outdoor story book sack of activities to do at home with parents and carers on summer evenings, but even better, a network of participants has been formed. Children can come in their pyjamas to a park or green space and take part in storytelling and read books surrounded by fairly lights or lanterns in a magical space as day becomes dusk and night.

Looking again at the aerial view,  you can see that taken together the area around the cafe with its edible woodland gardens and meeting space, could be linked with environmental projects on the disused bowling green, and linked on again to the Forest School woodland area. This would be a tremendous facility that could serve as a model for other Brent spaces as well as further afield.

It just needs people to match Katie's passion and vitality and get behind the vision to the benefit of all.

I'll leave the last word to Katie: 

This is a big vision project about how Nature connects us to better health, wellbeing, and each other. I wanted to show how parks can become dynamic and innovative centres for Nature connection, outdoor wellbeing, green prescribing, and community cohesion in Brent. 

 

With support from NCIL funding we're achieved that; we're impacted so many people through the project and create an ambitious template with huge potential to be scaled. We're shown a huge appetite alongst local residents, schools and families for what we're doing. 

 

This work is urgent and vital, especially in Brent, and it needs a joined up, strategic and multi-partner approach. The council's buy-in to this vision is critical and if we can get the right level of support and momentum the benefits for all are huge.

 

LINKS

 

https://www.katiemills.co.uk/business/stories-by-moonlight/

 

 

https://www.katiemills.co.uk/business/forestandfamily/

 

 




 

9 comments:

Unknown said...

Great development, and thanks as always for bringing this to wider attention Martin. Is that Shakespeare's Ariel who's settled in Roundwood and taken in the view? 😉

Martin Francis said...

Whoops, you got me there, and it escaped the spellchecker! Corrected.

David Walton said...

A good example of how to activate and with equity engage locals in their Brent public owned open space.

In South Kilburn, Granville Road public open space, regeneration re-newed in 2010 has had both of its brand new gates padlocked by Brent for the past 7 months. This happened also throughout 2017.

How can this green exclusion of the local public build community and resilience in South Kilburn car-free, no gardens intensive housing zone, population doubled already since year 2000?

Green Rebellion supported in one park, Grey Extinction forced in the other.




Anonymous said...

Have Brent Council claimed it as their work?

David Walton said...


Brent as landowner must have local allowed nature access and engagement at Roundwood (important for public health and wellbeing outcomes), in the same way that it padlocks out/ local public excludes for 7 months at Granville Road Public Closed Space in car-free housing population intensification South Kilburn.

Green reparations are claimed.

Anonymous said...

Brilliant project. Best wishes for continued success.

Unknown said...

It has been a partnership work among local organisations and the local planning forum supporting Forest and Family vision as it supports the neighbourhood Plan.
https://www.harlesdenneighbourhoodforum.com/our-space
There is still work to do as Katie mentions in the article.

Ilaria - Coordinatoor of the Harlesden Neighbourhood Forum

David Walton said...

Harlesden Major Town Centre to be the UK's biggest transport super hub, massive car-free towers intensive population growth happening.

The north- south active travel connect for Brent local people with Hammersmith and Fulham's south-north active travel route happening direct to the same UK biggest transport super hub town looks an important local infrastructure upgrade of high quality green travel opportunity.

Too important for nothing/ or even greater disconnect (existing rail footpath bridges are not yet strong legal protected)?

David Walton said...

The Canal and River Trusts- Canal Placemaking Study of the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal at Old Oak and Park Royal Harlesden is worth a Harlesden Neighbourhood Forum look.

Especially as it omits a 1950's north-south footpath bridge sited central in the new transport super hub pending?