Aspiring young designers and naturalists are being invited to submit their ideas for a new feature in the Wildlife Garden, at the Home of Rolls-Royce, in a nationwide competition launched today, Thursday 25 February.
- Rolls-Royce announces ‘rewilding’ of the Wildlife Garden at Goodwood manufacturing site
- Children aged 5-11 invited to submit designs for new wildlife-friendly features in UK-wide competition
- Garden provides vital habitat for wildlife and educational opportunities for local schoolchildren
- Project run in partnership with Chichester District Council and South Downs National Park
  
    
“We established our Wildlife Garden when the Home of
    Rolls-Royce was first created in 2003, as a dedicated area within
    our 42-acre site that would be deliberately left in its natural
    state. Over the intervening years, we have seen changes in
    approaches to conservation, notably the emphasis on 'rewilding' and
    we wanted to enhance our own project in line with these
    developments. We also felt it was important to respond to people's
    renewed engagement with and concern for local environment, prompted
    by the pandemic by enhancing the Wildlife Garden's features and
    habitats. 
    
  “We believe it is absolutely appropriate to involve children in
    this endeavour. Preserving wildlife and habitat really matters to
    them because it is their future at stake. As our recent
    international competition to design the Rolls-Royce of the future
    vividly demonstrated, children see the world with exceptional
    clarity, imagination and openness; they bring forward ideas that we,
    as adults, too easily overlook, dismiss or never even consider. I am
    intrigued to see what they come up with!”
  Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce
    Motor Cars
    
Aspiring young designers and naturalists are being
  invited to submit their ideas for a new feature in the Wildlife
  Garden, at the Home of Rolls-Royce, in a nationwide competition
  launched today, Thursday 25 February.
  
The company is asking children aged from five to 11 to suggest
  features that would enhance the Wildlife Garden and its habitat value
  to local flora and fauna. As well as ideas to nurture wildlife, such
  as pollinator-friendly plants, trees and flowers, bird feeders, bug
  hotels and nest-boxes, children can design seats, shelters, sculpture
  and other items that would make the Garden more appealing to
  Goodwood’s human population, too.
  
The winner will be chauffeur-driven to the Home of Rolls-Royce,
  then perform an official opening ceremony for the rejuvenated Garden,
  before viewing their winning feature in its new setting. The winner
  and runner-up will also receive a unique 3D computer-generated image
  of the Wildlife Garden, with their feature in pride of place, created
  by the Rolls-Royce Bespoke Design Team with the same software used for
  designing customers’ cars.
  
The Wildlife Garden occupies a small, secluded area of the
  Goodwood site to the south of The Drive, just inside the main gates.
  Established as part of the original landscaping when the plant was
  built in the early 2000s, it provides excellent habitat for a wide
  variety of plants, insects, birds and animals native to the south of
  England. It also offers valuable opportunities to observe and learn
  about nature for groups including children from the neighbouring March
  CE Primary School.
  
Other frequent visitors to the Wildlife Garden include the
  inhabitants of the Goodwood Apiary, a colony of around 250,000 English
  Honey Bees housed in six suitably palatial hives in a secluded
  location elsewhere on the site. The bees are responsible for producing
  ‘the Rolls‑Royce of honey’, a rare and exquisite natural bounty
  reserved exclusively for the marque’s customers and VIP guests.
  
Rolls-Royce is working with two key partners on the project,
  which lies close both to the ancient cathedral city of Chichester and
  the boundary of the South Downs National Park.
  
Councillor Penny Plant, Cabinet Member for Environment and
  Chichester Contract Services at Chichester District Council said: “The
  Rolls-Royce Wildlife Garden sits within our proposed Strategic
  Wildlife Corridor, running east of the city, one of several connecting
  Chichester and Pagham Harbour with the South Downs National Park.
  Wildlife corridors are incredibly important for protecting
  biodiversity, particularly pollinators, by linking areas of habitat
  that have been fragmented by human activity. The Wildlife Garden forms
  a vital link in this chain of habitat, and will benefit honeybees,
  bumblebees, butterflies, and bats, among other species. We’re really
  proud to be supporting this project that will help to safeguard our
  district’s diverse wildlife – a key aim of our Strategic Wildlife
  Corridors project and Local Plan Review.”
  
Julie Fawcett, Chair of the South Downs National Park Trust,
  said: “We’ve worked with Rolls‑Royce for a number of years, notably on
  its wonderful Goodwood Apiary project. We’re delighted to support this
  development of the Wildlife Garden and a National Park Ranger will
  also be carrying out a formal wildlife survey.
  
“It’s inspiring to see major local companies taking a real,
  tangible interest in their surrounding environment, and making an
  important contribution to the ecological health of the wider area.
  Nature doesn’t recognise boundaries, so a key aspect of the National
  Park’s Nature Recovery Strategy is to help create a network of
  wildlife havens right across the South East. This Wildlife Garden is
  nature recovery in action and it’s great to see people collaborating
  to boost biodiversity.”
  
Nicky Metcalfe, Headteacher at March CE Primary School, said,
  “Rolls-Royce is our nearest neighbour – our school is just outside the
  gates to the Goodwood site – and we've always enjoyed a close working
  relationship with the company. Our children were involved in the
  original launch of the Wildlife Garden when it was first created, and
  it's proved an incredibly valuable resource for teaching and learning
  ever since. We're very excited about this new phase in the Garden's
  life and development and can't wait to see the new features the
  competition produces.”
  
Gillian Keegan, Member of Parliament for Chichester, said, “I
  encourage everyone locally to get involved in this exciting project.
  This is a great opportunity for children to make a lasting
  contribution to our area and provide a space to benefit nature. The
  next generation is hugely aware of the challenges facing our
  environment and I look forward to seeing the wonderful ideas that come
  from the competition to improve our natural habitat.”
  
For more details and to submit designs please visit:
  www.rolls-roycewildlifegarden.com
  
  
Entries close on Monday 19 April 2021.
 
 
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