The principles, agreed by organisations including Nottingham Good Food Partnership, Nottingham Liberal Democrats, Nottingham Green Party, Nottingham Co-Housing and Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust, aim to ensure that any future development puts nature at the heart of economic recovery, meets or exceeds sustainable building principles, underpins Nottingham’s 2028 Carbon Neutral commitment and addresses issues such as social inclusion and food security.
Speaking ahead of a meeting of the groups which he will chair next month, former Nottingham South MP Alan Simpson, said: “It is clear that there is a huge public desire to see natural greenspace as a central focus for the Broadmarsh redevelopment but with the City Council and its expert panel now considering a much larger redevelopment area it is vital that the plans brought forward signal that Nottingham is a city with genuine green ambition. The proposals must be transformational and become an exemplar for the whole City. We can’t accept a ‘business as usual’ approach for the Broadmarsh and I’m delighted that the green umbrella partners intend to hold the Council’s feet to the fire to ensure that the proposals are suitably ambitious, inclusive and sustainable.”