Habitat for bees and pollinating insects - wildflower meadow at club's training ground |
THERE has been another honour for Manchester City FC - but this time unconnected with football.
It has won an ecology project of the year award from the Institute of Groundsmanship for creating wildlife habitat.
On the perimeter of its academy training ground, the Premier League title holders are steadily improving biodiversity by planting trees and even installing breeding boxes for insects such as solitary bees.
The ground sits on 80 acres reclaimed land used previously as a chemical treatment works.
The venture is part of a three-year plan which also aims to raise awareness of local ecology in the local community, hopefully including footballers.
The club academy's landscape contract manager, Daniel Lewis, comments: "What we are achieving here shows what can be done to align first class footballing facilities with ecology and biodiversity."
Equally upbeat is the academy's head gardener, Daniel Cranmer, who provides more detail thus:
"We have introduced wildflower meadows, with lots of high nectar pollinating plants.
"We have a clear understanding of what we want to do and developing manageable projects with our small landscape team.
"We have shown what can be achieved with little investment, but still produce such dramatic changes for the good of the environment.
"We have had to think and re-assessthe way we do our maintenance and have encompassed new programmes which have required the team to be open-minded, willing to learn and go the extra mile.
"Full credit is due to team members Paul Silk, Dalton Eckersall, Pavel Furda, Karl Horne, Dominic Knower, Ben Williams, and Martin Neighbour."
The academy works closely with the company, idverde, a leading provider of grounds maintenance services and landscape creation projects.
The groundstaff team at the Manchester City academy with their award |