Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks has put over 3km of its overhead lines underground at Thursley National Nature Reserve, and one of the old pylons has been incorporated into a unique piece of art at the reserve's Dragon Fly Trail.
The work, which began in 2014, was part of a nationwide scheme that encourages customers to nominate Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, National Parks and National Scenic Areas where the appearance could be enhanced with the removal of electricity poles or pylons. Over the course of its 18-month programme, the teams from Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks dismantled 22 wooden poles carrying 11, 000 volt lines, and eleven metal pylons dating back to the 1960s which carried the 33, 000 volt lines.
Greg Moore, who led the project for Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks said: "This is such a beautiful part of Surrey, and the reserve is very popular with visitors, and so we had to make sure that access was maintained at all times during the project. We also had to make sure that our machinery didn't cause any damage to the natural beauty of the landscape.
"As well as having to contend with the ever-changing British weather, another challenge we faced was that this part of the country had been heavily targeted during the war, and so we employed a specialist company to carry out a detailed magnetometer survey of all the land we'd be working in to make sure there were no unexploded bombs from the past."
Once the project was completed and all of the new underground cables energised, Thursley National Nature Reserve wanted to create a lasting memorial to the pylons. To do this, and to highlight the diverse range of dragonfly species on the reserve, the reserve's owners, Natural England, commissioned local artists to create a design that recognised both.
If you would like to learn more about the scheme, and how communities can suggest areas which they feel could benefit from a similar undergrounding project, please visit the dedicated section on our website.
The above photo shows Greg Moore (l)andRobert Stickland with the new sculpture in the background.
As we look for more sustainable and environmentally friendly ways to live and work, a fund-raising scheme run by a Wiltshire hospice and supported by Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN) has provided an answer to recycling old Christmas trees, in a way that gives back to the community and boosts the charity's resources.
The tree-cycling initiative, run by Dorothy House Hospice Care for the past six years, has raised a staggering �63,545 in the first week of 2022 by gathering the real trees from homes across areas including Bath, Radstock and Warminster. The charity asks people to sign up to the scheme in the run up to Christmas, so they can arrange for their old trees to be collected and chipped in the new year in return for a small donation.
This year, nearly 4,300 trees were collected across 16 Wiltshire postcodes by a band of volunteers who worked under current coronavirus guidelines to safely gather and transport the trees to central locations where they could be chipped. Since the start of the initiative in December 2016, SSEN has volunteered to help the charity by providing the chippers and colleagues needed to clear the thousands of trees the charity has collected; returning the chippings to local authorities and community groups for their use as environmentally friendly, reusable materials.
SSEN's Thomas Gardiner � who is based in the company's Ridgeway region � has volunteered his time to help Dorothy House Hospice Care since January 2017. The distribution network operator lends the vehicles and chippers required to carry out the recycling of the trees, and this year Thomas was joined by nine other colleagues* from SSEN to work on the largest amount of trees the charity has recycled to date.
With 4,280 trees to process, the team worked across two days (Friday 7 and Saturday 8 January) and used electric vehicles from SSEN's fleet to adhere to Bath's low emission zones, and to ensure the most environmentally friendly way to assist with the increasingly popular fundraiser.
Thomas said:"Over the last six years, this tree-cycling scheme organised by Dorothy House Hospice Care has raised vital funds while encouraging people to recycle their trees in the most sustainable way, with the by-product from them being shared locally for use in community areas such as green spaces, parks and playgrounds.
"Sustainability and the adoption of low carbon technologies is key to SSEN and this year we have been able to use some of our electric vehicles to make this the most environmentally friendly tree-cycler yet.
"My colleagues and I are delighted to be able to volunteer and to help raise money for this incredible local charity, while helping boost Wiltshire's community and environment through sustainability and recycling."
Steph Cox, Community and Events Fundraising Manager for Dorothy House Hospice Care said: "This was our sixth Christmas tree collection with a record amount of trees signed up to be collected. We are so pleased to have raised over �63,500, as this will go such a long way towards providing the vital care and support in our local community.
"We really couldn't run the collection without the continued support that SSEN have provided and I wanted to say ahuge thank you to all of the team for working so hard, in all elements, across our Bath, Radstock and Warminster postcodes."
Dorothy House Hospice Care supports and cares for patients and their families across a 700 square mile area, including Bath and North East Somerset, and parts of Wiltshire and Somerset. Their services are provided whenever and wherever they are needed; at home, in the Hospice, or in the community, to respect the uniqueness of each patient and their family, and empower them to choose the type of care they receive.
*SSEN colleagues volunteering their services for the Dorothy House Hospice Care fundraiser were: Chris Boylan, Charlie Cambray, Thomas Gardiner, Georgie Gough, Alan Harris, Craig Hooper, Phil Otton, Lizzie Perry, Dan Sherwood and Will Stevens.
Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks has put over 3km of its overhead lines underground at Thursley National Nature Reserve, and one of the old pylons has been incorporated into a unique piece of art at the reserve's Dragon Fly Trail.
The work, which began in 2014, was part of a nationwide scheme that encourages customers to nominate Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, National Parks and National Scenic Areas where the appearance could be enhanced with the removal of electricity poles or pylons. Over the course of its 18-month programme, the teams from Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks dismantled 22 wooden poles carrying 11, 000 volt lines, and eleven metal pylons dating back to the 1960s which carried the 33, 000 volt lines.
Greg Moore, who led the project for Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks said: "This is such a beautiful part of Surrey, and the reserve is very popular with visitors, and so we had to make sure that access was maintained at all times during the project. We also had to make sure that our machinery didn't cause any damage to the natural beauty of the landscape.
"As well as having to contend with the ever-changing British weather, another challenge we faced was that this part of the country had been heavily targeted during the war, and so we employed a specialist company to carry out a detailed magnetometer survey of all the land we'd be working in to make sure there were no unexploded bombs from the past."
Once the project was completed and all of the new underground cables energised, Thursley National Nature Reserve wanted to create a lasting memorial to the pylons. To do this, and to highlight the diverse range of dragonfly species on the reserve, the reserve's owners, Natural England, commissioned local artists to create a design that recognised both.
If you would like to learn more about the scheme, and how communities can suggest areas which they feel could benefit from a similar undergrounding project, please visit the dedicated section on our website.
The above photo shows Greg Moore (l)andRobert Stickland with the new sculpture in the background.
Accordion
Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks has put over 3km of its overhead lines underground at Thursley National Nature Reserve, and one of the old pylons has been incorporated into a unique piece of art at the reserve's Dragon Fly Trail.
The work, which began in 2014, was part of a nationwide scheme that encourages customers to nominate Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, National Parks and National Scenic Areas where the appearance could be enhanced with the removal of electricity poles or pylons. Over the course of its 18-month programme, the teams from Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks dismantled 22 wooden poles carrying 11, 000 volt lines, and eleven metal pylons dating back to the 1960s which carried the 33, 000 volt lines.
Greg Moore, who led the project for Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks said: "This is such a beautiful part of Surrey, and the reserve is very popular with visitors, and so we had to make sure that access was maintained at all times during the project. We also had to make sure that our machinery didn't cause any damage to the natural beauty of the landscape.
"As well as having to contend with the ever-changing British weather, another challenge we faced was that this part of the country had been heavily targeted during the war, and so we employed a specialist company to carry out a detailed magnetometer survey of all the land we'd be working in to make sure there were no unexploded bombs from the past."
Once the project was completed and all of the new underground cables energised, Thursley National Nature Reserve wanted to create a lasting memorial to the pylons. To do this, and to highlight the diverse range of dragonfly species on the reserve, the reserve's owners, Natural England, commissioned local artists to create a design that recognised both.
If you would like to learn more about the scheme, and how communities can suggest areas which they feel could benefit from a similar undergrounding project, please visit the dedicated section on our website.
The above photo shows Greg Moore (l)andRobert Stickland with the new sculpture in the background.
As we look for more sustainable and environmentally friendly ways to live and work, a fund-raising scheme run by a Wiltshire hospice and supported by Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN) has provided an answer to recycling old Christmas trees, in a way that gives back to the community and boosts the charity's resources.
The tree-cycling initiative, run by Dorothy House Hospice Care for the past six years, has raised a staggering �63,545 in the first week of 2022 by gathering the real trees from homes across areas including Bath, Radstock and Warminster. The charity asks people to sign up to the scheme in the run up to Christmas, so they can arrange for their old trees to be collected and chipped in the new year in return for a small donation.
This year, nearly 4,300 trees were collected across 16 Wiltshire postcodes by a band of volunteers who worked under current coronavirus guidelines to safely gather and transport the trees to central locations where they could be chipped. Since the start of the initiative in December 2016, SSEN has volunteered to help the charity by providing the chippers and colleagues needed to clear the thousands of trees the charity has collected; returning the chippings to local authorities and community groups for their use as environmentally friendly, reusable materials.
SSEN's Thomas Gardiner � who is based in the company's Ridgeway region � has volunteered his time to help Dorothy House Hospice Care since January 2017. The distribution network operator lends the vehicles and chippers required to carry out the recycling of the trees, and this year Thomas was joined by nine other colleagues* from SSEN to work on the largest amount of trees the charity has recycled to date.
With 4,280 trees to process, the team worked across two days (Friday 7 and Saturday 8 January) and used electric vehicles from SSEN's fleet to adhere to Bath's low emission zones, and to ensure the most environmentally friendly way to assist with the increasingly popular fundraiser.
Thomas said:"Over the last six years, this tree-cycling scheme organised by Dorothy House Hospice Care has raised vital funds while encouraging people to recycle their trees in the most sustainable way, with the by-product from them being shared locally for use in community areas such as green spaces, parks and playgrounds.
"Sustainability and the adoption of low carbon technologies is key to SSEN and this year we have been able to use some of our electric vehicles to make this the most environmentally friendly tree-cycler yet.
"My colleagues and I are delighted to be able to volunteer and to help raise money for this incredible local charity, while helping boost Wiltshire's community and environment through sustainability and recycling."
Steph Cox, Community and Events Fundraising Manager for Dorothy House Hospice Care said: "This was our sixth Christmas tree collection with a record amount of trees signed up to be collected. We are so pleased to have raised over �63,500, as this will go such a long way towards providing the vital care and support in our local community.
"We really couldn't run the collection without the continued support that SSEN have provided and I wanted to say ahuge thank you to all of the team for working so hard, in all elements, across our Bath, Radstock and Warminster postcodes."
Dorothy House Hospice Care supports and cares for patients and their families across a 700 square mile area, including Bath and North East Somerset, and parts of Wiltshire and Somerset. Their services are provided whenever and wherever they are needed; at home, in the Hospice, or in the community, to respect the uniqueness of each patient and their family, and empower them to choose the type of care they receive.
*SSEN colleagues volunteering their services for the Dorothy House Hospice Care fundraiser were: Chris Boylan, Charlie Cambray, Thomas Gardiner, Georgie Gough, Alan Harris, Craig Hooper, Phil Otton, Lizzie Perry, Dan Sherwood and Will Stevens.
Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks has put over 3km of its overhead lines underground at Thursley National Nature Reserve, and one of the old pylons has been incorporated into a unique piece of art at the reserve's Dragon Fly Trail.
The work, which began in 2014, was part of a nationwide scheme that encourages customers to nominate Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, National Parks and National Scenic Areas where the appearance could be enhanced with the removal of electricity poles or pylons. Over the course of its 18-month programme, the teams from Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks dismantled 22 wooden poles carrying 11, 000 volt lines, and eleven metal pylons dating back to the 1960s which carried the 33, 000 volt lines.
Greg Moore, who led the project for Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks said: "This is such a beautiful part of Surrey, and the reserve is very popular with visitors, and so we had to make sure that access was maintained at all times during the project. We also had to make sure that our machinery didn't cause any damage to the natural beauty of the landscape.
"As well as having to contend with the ever-changing British weather, another challenge we faced was that this part of the country had been heavily targeted during the war, and so we employed a specialist company to carry out a detailed magnetometer survey of all the land we'd be working in to make sure there were no unexploded bombs from the past."
Once the project was completed and all of the new underground cables energised, Thursley National Nature Reserve wanted to create a lasting memorial to the pylons. To do this, and to highlight the diverse range of dragonfly species on the reserve, the reserve's owners, Natural England, commissioned local artists to create a design that recognised both.
If you would like to learn more about the scheme, and how communities can suggest areas which they feel could benefit from a similar undergrounding project, please visit the dedicated section on our website.
The above photo shows Greg Moore (l)andRobert Stickland with the new sculpture in the background.