- Over £370,000 awarded this year to 17 community-led projects, in fifth round of the Mayor of Greater Manchester’s Green Spaces Fund.
- 103 different projects across the city-region now backed by the fund, helping residents to improve their local community with vibrant green spaces.
- The Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, has pledged to continue the fund so even more Greater Manchester communities can get involved in making their areas greener.
New green spaces have been created across the city-region thanks to community-led projects. 103 spaces have now been transformed since 2022, funded by the Mayor’s Greater Manchester Green Spaces Fund.
The latest round of the fund awarded money to 17 successful projects, empowering community groups across the city-region to bring their ideas for improving local space to life and make Greater Manchester greener.
The projects bring communities together and encourage residents to get involved in nature recovery, from volunteering opportunities and building green skills to learning how to grow their own food and look after green spaces.
Successful projects backed in the latest round include:
- ‘The Secret Garden’ by Blackrod Primary School in Bolton: An unused, overgrown space on the school site will be transformed into a community garden for children, families and community members. Education is at the core of this project, where volunteers will help people learn about growing healthy food and supporting biodiversity. The goal is to create a closer-knit, healthier community while providing accessible green space for all.
- Cleaner, Green and Safer Canals by the Canal & River Trust: This project plans to make central Manchester’s waterways cleaner, greener and safer for everyone. Working with local volunteers, the group will improve green and blue spaces between Lock 87 and 88 on the Rochdale Canal, and between Lock 1 and Lock 3 on the Ashton Canal. The main aim is to empower local people to care for and use the canals on their doorstep, for everyday physical activity, active travel and to connect with nature.
- Brinnington Covid Memorial Gardens by Green Thumbs Community Allotments in Stockport: Transforming an unattractive concrete space into a Covid Memorial Garden and multi-use green space. The group plans to create a unique place where people can reflect, remember lost loved ones and take a moment for their own wellbeing. The area will be used to host activities where people can learn new growing techniques, learn more about nature, and work together to maintain the environment for future generations.
Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, said: