Developer Wykeland Group and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust have announced a framework agreement to create developments in which people and nature thrive together.
The agreement builds on more than a decade of successful collaboration between the two organisations and aims to ensure commercially successful development and ecological enhancement go hand in hand.
The innovative Ecology and Biodiversity Framework Agreement commits the two organisations to work together constructively to create and nurture wildlife and natural habitats alongside the delivery of sustainable, commercially-viable developments.
The agreement with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust commits Wykeland to embedding ecological principles across the company’s entire portfolio of developments.
Representatives from Hull-based Wykeland and the Trust came together for an event at Wykeland’s Bridgehead business park in Hessle, East Yorkshire, to celebrate over a decade of partnership between the organisations, introduce the new agreement and formally sign it.
Wykeland and the Trust have worked closely together since 2013 to demonstrate how commercial development and environmental stewardship delivers better outcomes for both wildlife and people.
A flagship project from their collaboration has been a 1km nature trail at Bridgehead, near the Humber Bridge, designed and created by Wykeland, working in partnership with the Trust. The Trust manages the pathway and its surrounding natural habitat on behalf of Wykeland.
Wykeland has also worked with community volunteering charity, The Conservation Volunteers, as well as local primary schools to create the Jubilee Woodland, which features 1,200 trees and borders Wykeland’s Melton West business park in East Yorkshire.
A major element of the new agreement is the integration of the Trust’s expertise at the earliest stages of Wykeland’s design and development processes, as a constructive and critical friend.
Wykeland will actively involve the Trust from the initial planning and design phases, ensuring that ecological considerations are prioritised in new and existing projects, including developments such as Bridgehead, Melton West, the Fruit Market urban village in Hull, and Europarc in Grimsby.
Wykeland Managing Director Dominic Gibbons said: “We’re delighted to be continuing our work with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust to enhance not just our future developments, but also our existing ones.
“We’re committed to ensuring all our developments benefit the businesses that occupy them, and the people who work in and use them, as well as enriching the natural environment.
“This new agreement builds on the great work we’ve done with the Trust over the past 10 years. It commits our team and the Trust to work even more closely together across our entire portfolio to create commercially successful and attractive places where both people and nature thrive.”
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust is a charity dedicated to conserving, protecting and restoring wildlife and wild places in Yorkshire. It looks after more than 100 nature reserves across Yorkshire and is involved in hundreds of other conservation-related projects.
The Trust’s Chief Executive Officer, Rachael Bice, said: “Driving better outcomes for wildlife in new development is critical and possible, even when there is pressure for strong economic growth and more homes.
“The relationship we have built with Wykeland shows solutions can be found for ecologically sensitive development when professionals bring together their different perspectives, that benefit wildlife and create attractive, healthier places where people want to live and work.”