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The future is bright at the Rivergreen Methodist Hub

Congregation at Clifton Methodist Church service

The future is bright at the Rivergreen Methodist Hub

Published: 28 March 2022
A grant from Benefact Trust’s Methodist Grants Programme has supported the renovation of a valued community hub in Nottingham.

For decades, the Rivergreen Methodist Hub in Clifton, south Nottingham, has been a vital asset to the community used by hundreds of people every week.

Unsurprisingly, it was showing its age, with internal and external work needed to bring it back up to scratch. So a fundraising effort was started, with an ambitious target of £500,000 to pay for the work.

Through our Methodist Grants Programme, Benefact Trust was just one of a number of organisations which provided grants towards the cost.

Rosie Farrow, a church member and Nottingham and Derby District Facilities Manager, said: “From Scouts and Boys’ Brigade evenings, to mother-and-toddler groups, to clubs for older people, rarely a day goes by when Rivergreen isn’t in use. Little had been done to the building since the 1970s, and when the District took over the trusteeship of the building, they decided to undertake a significant renovation.

“The aim was to future-proof the Hub, and make it more suitable for a wide range of users and more environmentally-friendly. Clifton is quite a deprived area, so it’s a very important resource but it’s also hard to find the money locally for something this big. We were tremendously grateful for the help of organisations such as Benefact Trust.”

Some of the work was structural – the removal of a stage and the installation of a mezzanine floor with office space for the District HQ – and other parts were focussed on bringing the building into the 21st century.

“The toilets and the kitchen were completely refurbished,” said Rosie, “and the old windows were replaced to make them more energy efficient. The flooring was replaced, the doors were widened and switched to fire doors, and a large new car park was built and security lighting put in. A new meeting and worship space with audio-visual facilities was created, and the entrance was revamped, too. We used a local firm to do the work because we wanted to minimise the carbon footprint associated with their travel.”

The fundraising began in 2019 and the project took around two years, meaning the work started right at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The lockdowns definitely made things trickier,” said Rosie, “but we managed to press on and get the work finished, and we’re absolutely thrilled with the result. I’d definitely advise others with projects of their own – large or small – to get in touch with Benefact Trust about the Methodist Grants Programme to see if they can help.’

Paul Playford, Grants Officer for Benefact Trust, said: “It’s wonderful to see our Methodist funding being put to such good use. The newly refurbished hub will provide local people with a great place to meet and socialise for many years to come.”


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