Environment Centre (Swansea)

Coordinates: 51°37′07″N 3°56′11″W / 51.6185°N 3.936373°W / 51.6185; -3.936373

The Environment Centre Swansea
Founded May 1994
Type Company Limited by Guarantee, Registered Charity
2929729[1]
Registration no. 1039378[2]
Focus information, education, activity
Location
Origins Swansea Environmental Forum (SEF)
Area served
Swansea, South West Wales
Membership
individual, groups and schools
Key people
Jenny Edwards (manager)
Website www.environmentcentre.org.uk

The Environment Centre in Swansea, Wales, is an independent charity organisation for environmental information, education and activity. Environment Centre may also refer to the building the charity is located in.

The Environment Centre's aims are to raise people's awareness of environmental issues, to increase the participation in environmental projects and to work towards a more sustainable future. It promotes, for example, the concept of the three Rs (reduce, reuse, recycle).[4] The Centre provides support for environmental organisations and groups, information on environmental issues and educational activities.[5] Both the charity organisation and its building serve as a central place of exchange and networking for environmental organisations all around Swansea and South Wales. Organisations and businesses can hire rooms in the Centre for meetings, training, talks, conferences, interviews and events. The Centre also has low cost office space available for local voluntary sector organisations.[6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]

History

The Environment Centre was formed by the Swansea Environmental Forum (SEF) in May 1994[5][12] with the City Council of Swansea, the Countryside Council for Wales and the Prince of Wales Committee participating.[13] The SEF itself is now based in the Environment Centre.[14] In 1995 HRH The Prince of Wales opened the building. Located in Pier Street, it is a part of the general revitalisation of Swansea's Maritime Quarter.

The building

Before the Environment Centre came to use the old red brick building in the Maritime Quarter, it was used as one of Swansea's telephone exchanges (now located in BT Tower). When renovating the Old Telephone Exchange to shape the Environment Centre, reuse of old materials lessened the needs for new ones. The modern western part of the building, the Resource Centre or annexe, was built by Air Architecture in 1999 and opened in 2001.[15] It was built under eco-design principles, reusing and recycling old material and fitting the building with sustainable technologies. The Environment Centre thus demonstrates practical energy efficiency measures.[13] The Annexe was awarded with the Lord Mayor's design awards 2000 in the Categories Best new build - non-residential and Energy efficient. A solar panel on the roof of the Centre is used to heat the annexe's water and also for the annexe's under floor heating. The turf roof and the organic garden in the back yard provide an eco-friendly environment for the staff and visitors of the centre.[16]

Ecological, organic and fairtrade goods

The annexe hosts a fairtrade internet café and a green shop, providing products which are fairly traded, organic or produced ecologically. Amongst the range of products are Ecoleaf (by Suma cooperative), Doy Bags and Ecover cleaning products, which are claimed to be effective and completely biodegradable.[17] For waste reducing reasons, the shop offers the possibility to refill old vessels of cleaning products. Many rooms of the Environment Centre are used by independent environmental organisations, as part of the Environment Centre's policy of supporting environmental organisations.

Information at the Centre

Besides personal answers from people at the Centre, the following information is available:

The EC as an umbrella organisation

One of the three aims of The Environment Centre is to support local environmental organisations. This is being done by providing office space to others. The Environment Centre thus functions as an umbrella organisation for other organisations. These include:[5]

Undercurrents, OnePeople and Sustainable Swansea both produce videos and images shared on Swansea Telly, a local video portal similar to YouTube.

Footnotes

  1. Entry in the register of the Companies House Belfast.
  2. Entry in the Register of Charities of the Charity Commission.
  3. Castle Electoral Division 2001, by the Research & Information Team of the City and County of Swansea
  4. Peregrine, Chris. Waste not want not - recycling is all bagged up. In: The Evening Post, Thu Dec 2, 2010.
  5. 1 2 3 Trustees' report and financial statement of the Environment Centre (March 2010), provided by the UK Charity Commission
  6. The Environment Centre, official website.
  7. Social Accounts 2007-2008
  8. Summary of the 2007-2009 Social Accounts pdf
  9. official Social Accounts 2005-2006
  10. Information about environmental organisations throughout Swansea by the Swansea Waste Forum
  11. Swansea Environment Centre in BBC's register of South West Wales Nature Organisations
  12. Swansea Environmental Forum (SEF) official website.
  13. 1 2 Wilson, D. M. (director of Planning, City and County of Swansea, ): Swansea Maritime Quarter. City and County of Swansea. ISBN 1-901461-13-0. p35
  14. Swansea Environmental Forum 'about us' on official website
  15. The Environment Centre, Pier Street, Swansea presentation of main features in the references of Air Architecture.
  16. Ecological Design Elements Incorporated at the Environment Centre. Information about the Environment Centre's Building by the Environment Centre
  17. Ecover List of official Resellers
  18. Undercurrents official website.
  19. Good evening, here is the real news, by Paul O'Connor, in: The Guardian, Monday 20 August 2001
  20. Friends of the Earth local group Swansea
  21. Sustainable Swansea official website.
  22. Swansea Environmental Education Forum official website.
  23. MOre Green Project official website.
  24. OnePeople Productions official website.
  25. BTCV Wales presentation on official website
  26. BikeAbility Wales official website
  27. Welsh Youth Forum on Sustainable Development (wyfsd) official website.
  28. SCRAP profile on the City and County of Swansea's website
  29. Groundwork, 'about us'
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