Two new green-roofed shelters have been officially unveiled at a popular local country park.
They have been erected at Cotgrave Country Park as part of Nottinghamshire County Council’s commitment to provide high quality green spaces and a covered area that can be used by visiting schools and groups and other visitors to the park.
The county council, which owns and manages the park, has funded work to build the structures via its Green Investment Fund and has worked with the Friends of Cotgrave Country Park to deliver the community-boosting project.
County council chairman and local divisional member, Councillor Richard Butler, and Councillor John Cottee, Deputy Cabinet Member for Transport and Environment, joined volunteers from the Friends of Cotgrave Country Park at a special unveiling ceremony on Wednesday 29 January.
Cllr Butler had proposed the project to benefit from Green Investment Funding and he said: “As the county councillor for the area, I was delighted to attend the official unveiling of the shelters at Cotgrave Country Park and I am sure they will prove extremely popular with families, schools and community groups – especially during the warmer, summer months.
“It is great to see money from the Green Investment Fund being used for such a worthwhile project which will benefit everyone who visits this fantastic green space.
“I would like to thank the efforts of the volunteers from the excellent Friends of Cotgrave Country Park who have worked tirelessly with our officers to bring this fantastic project to fruition.
“Cotgrave Country Park has so much to offer, and I would encourage anybody who lives in the area to come to explore and enjoy the beautiful green surroundings which are home to a variety of species.”
The shelters are steel framed, timber-clad, open-sided structures with a sedum roof and bug hotel panels to benefit pollinators and other insects.
So far, £27,495 of a £50,000 funding pot has been spent on the two shelters and associated ground works such as creating concrete bases for the structures and a path, as well as installing new fencing.
The remaining £15,155 is expected to be used to complete landscaping works in and around the area occupied by the shelters in the coming months.
For more information about the Green Investment Fund and the county council’s work to reach its Carbon Neutral targets, visit: www.nottinghamshire.gov.uk/planning-and-environment/climate-change
Any school or community group which would like to access the space should contact Nottinghamshire County Council’s Green Spaces team by emailing [email protected]