Disadvantaged communities across the UK empowered to let nature flourish thanks to £5m National Lottery funding

Disadvantaged communities across the UK empowered to let nature flourish thanks to £5m National Lottery funding

Nextdoor Nature - a new natural legacy to mark the Queen’s Jubilee - will help nature flourish in North Merseyside.

The National Lottery Heritage Fund today announced a £5 million investment in a ground-breaking initiative to create a huge matrix of community-led rewilding projects – improving the lives of people from some of the most disadvantaged areas across the UK and leaving a lasting natural legacy in honour of the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. The funding is part of The National Lottery’s £22 million investment to mark the Jubilee and North Merseyside will benefit with its own project. 

Delivered by The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside (that's us!), Nextdoor Nature will give people the skills, tools and opportunity to take action for nature. This could include establishing wild habitats and green corridors in areas of economic and nature deprivation, rewilding school grounds, or naturalising highly urbanised or unused areas. The pandemic has demonstrated just how important access to a well-cared for natural environment is to communities across the UK. 

Examples of communities that we'll work alongside include:

  • People within the Seaforth, Bootle and Waterloo areas who are concerned about losing their green space to development.
  • Coastal communities and others who don’t currently access nature.
  • Children, young people and families, who'll be encouraged to use their local green spaces for mental and physical wellbeing benefits.

The UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world, yet research shows that 85 per cent of people in nature-deprived areas say more natural spaces would improve their quality of life. The majority also say that having access to local natural spaces is more important to them post-pandemic. Nextdoor Nature will enable people to make this happen and in doing so, take steps to tackle the nature and climate crisis while also addressing important health and wellbeing needs. 

Dr Simon Thurley

© Broni Lloyd-Edwards

Simon Thurley, Chair of The National Lottery Heritage Fund, says: 

"As part of The National Lottery family’s £22m investment to mark the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, we are delighted to launch Nextdoor Nature, a transformational initiative which will give access to the natural environment to thousands of people who may not have fully enjoyed or appreciated it before. We hope that many people will, for the first time, get hands-on with nature, creating a new generation of champions for our precious natural environment."

Liz Bonnin

Liz Bonnin (C) Andrew Crowley

Liz Bonnin, President of The Wildlife Trusts, says: 

"We humans are key to solving the climate crisis and restoring our natural heritage. The UK is one of the most nature depleted countries in the world, but Nextdoor Nature is working to set that right, putting local communities at the heart of helping our wild places to recover, and making sure that no matter where we live, we can be part of this crucial endeavour. 

"The Wildlife Trusts are firmly rooted in communities and can provide support and advice to those willing to lead the charge in bringing wildlife back to homes and workplaces – in turn inspiring those around them to do the same. We can achieve incredible things when we work together!” 

A blue tit perched at the entrance to a log

Amy Lewis

Daveen Wallis, Director of Nature & Wellbeing at Lancashire Wildlife Trust, says: 

"We know that people want to take action to improve their neighbourhoods but often it’s hard to know where to start. Nextdoor Nature will let communities set their own agenda about the environmental issues they want to tackle, and we’ll be looking at different ways of bringing people together and giving them support, skills and confidence to take the next step."

Thanks to the funding from the Heritage Fund, we'll facilitate action from at least 60 groups over the next two years to take action for nature, particularly in areas that are deprived of quality green space. Evidence shows that people are increasingly disconnected from nature, with profound consequences for health, and it also means they are less likely to protect their natural heritage.  

In the words of Sir David Attenborough, President Emeritus of The Wildlife Trusts, “No-one will protect what they don’t care about; and no-one will care about what they have never experienced.”  

The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside has experience in rewilding communities: 

Small Tortoiseshell butterfly

Small Tortoiseshell ©Scott Petrek

Want to find out more?

Learn more about Nextdoor Nature and what this wonderful funding can do for our local communities, and for wildlife!

More about Nextdoor Nature

Editor's Notes

Additional quotes

Gillian Burke, Vice President of The Wildlife Trusts, says:  

“Most of us want to help nature and connect with nature, but it can be difficult to know where to begin or how to make a difference, especially when green spaces are a long, long way from home. The Wildlife Trusts’ new Nextdoor Nature scheme wants to change all that by providing advice and support so that everyone has a chance to create and enjoy wilder spaces in their neighbourhoods. Thanks to National Lottery players, Nextdoor Nature has enormous potential to see lots of small actions scale up to make a big difference for health and wellbeing, as well as tackling the climate and ecological crises we face.” 

Dr Amir Khan, Vice President of The Wildlife Trusts, says: 

“We all need nature, but nature also needs us! To help solve the climate, nature and health crises, its important people are given the knowledge, support and tools to really make a difference – giving them the confidence to take action to help wildlife wherever they live. The knock-on impacts of this can result in better personal wellbeing, improved community spaces and more nature. It’s a win-win! That’s why I’m supporting the partnership between the National Lottery Heritage Fund and The Wildlife Trusts to create a lasting natural legacy for the Jubilee.” 

Research cited in the press release

85% of people in nature-deprived areas say more natural spaces would improve their quality of life – the majority also say that having access to local natural spaces is more important post-pandemic. See poll data in “New campaign calls for legal right to local nature in Levelling Up reforms” here. 

The health and wellbeing benefits that come with having more nature around homes and neighbourhoods are immense and well documented. Read some of the evidence here and, for example, Doses of Neighborhood Nature: The Benefits for Mental Health of Living with Nature here

Evidence shows that people are increasingly disconnected from nature, with profound consequences. It negatively impacts our health and wellbeing and leads to a long-term reduction in people’s affinity to nature, which means they are less likely to protect their natural heritage. See Human-nature interactions and the consequences and drivers of provisioning wildlife, Cox & Gaston, 2018). Also see A Growing Disconnection from Nature Is Evident in Cultural Products here

The Wildlife Trusts have experience in rewilding communities

  • Lancashire Wildlife Trust’s My Place project is here

  • Gwent Wildlife Trust’s My Wild Newport project is here.  

  • Scottish Wildlife Trust’s Natural Connections project is here

Other examples of where Wildlife Trusts have enabled communities to reconnect with nature include: 

  • Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust worked with a care home to create a wildlife garden – more here.  

  • Yorkshire Wildlife Trust worked with groups including Welcome to Great Horton to access the Slovakian Roma community in one of Bradford’s most deprived areas.   

  • The Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales worked in partnership with New Horizons in Swansea to consult people with a learning disability on their Clear Streams Project.   

The National Lottery Heritage Fund

Using money raised by the National Lottery, we Inspire, lead and resource the UK’s heritage to create positive and lasting change for people and communities, now and in the future. www.heritagefund.org.uk

As part of the National Lottery’s £22million investment to celebrate the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, The National Lottery Heritage Fund is investing £7m to create a lasting legacy for communities and nature across the UK. The funding will empower disadvantaged communities to take action for nature on their doorsteps and enable 70 young people to undertake paid placements in the nature heritage sector. 

Follow @HeritageFundUK on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram and use #NationalLotteryHeritageFund #PlatinumJubilee 

The Wildlife Trusts

The Wildlife Trusts are making the world wilder and helping to ensure that nature is part of everyone’s lives. We are a grassroots movement of 46 charities with more than 870,000 members and 38,000 volunteers. No matter where you are in the UK, there is a Wildlife Trust inspiring people and saving, protecting and standing up for the natural world. With the support of our members, we care for and restore special places for nature on land and run marine conservation projects and collect vital data on the state of our seas. Every Wildlife Trust works within its local community to inspire people to create a wilder future – from advising thousands of landowners on how to manage their land to benefit wildlife, to connecting hundreds of thousands of school children with nature every year.

National Lottery Heritage Fund, The Queen's Platinum Jubilee and The Wildlife Trusts logos sit side by side