The ACRE Network’s seventh annual Village Halls Week campaign will run from Monday 18 to Sunday 24 March. As ever, the purpose of the campaign is to showcase the importance of village halls and other community buildings to their rural communities.
This year, the national campaign will also focus on how village halls can make a positive impact on the environment, with the network of community buildings across the whole country being targeted with ideas for how they can ‘go green’:
- Monday will consider how halls can improve their energy efficiency, with new design guidance being published.
- Tuesday will look at what halls can do to encourage behaviour change in their communities
- Wednesday will consider the activities that halls can host to support environmental considerations (e.g. repair clubs, warm hubs, library of things, youth climate forums, community fridges, conservation volunteers, refill stations…)
- Thursday will share other ideas for making your community greener (e.g. community food growing, bug hotels, wildflower meadows, hedgehog highways…)
- Friday will provide the opportunity to celebrate success if you’re going green by recognising the hard work of volunteers).
More locally, in Cambridgeshire, we have chosen to host a special in-person conference during Village Halls Week. The event, on Thursday 21 March, will provide an opportunity to learn from the longevity of the community buildings network and all that has been achieved over the last 100 years in the building and management of these key local facilities and look at the future sustainability of village halls and other community buildings.
The programme for the conference has now been confirmed. Speakers will include:
- Kirsten Bennett, Cambridgeshire ACRE’s Chief Executive, hosting an interactive session to help understand what our rural communities might need and expect when using community buildings in future.
- Dan Jones, architect from Civic London, talking about building design and implementing eco-improvements to save energy and reduce their carbon footprint;
- Anthony Henry, Business Partnership Manager from Bridge Interiors, talking about how buildings can improve their internal layout to make them fit to fulfil their communities’ needs in future.
There will also be a session involving a number of representatives from communities across the county giving insights into the building improvement programmes they have undertaken to show what’s possible in every size of building, from small improvements to large new builds.
The conference will also be used to launch Cambridgeshire ACRE’s travelling Centenary exhibition that tells the story of our work over the past 100 year and the new Halls for Hire website, an important tool to increase village hall bookings.
More information is available at https://info.cambsacre.org.uk/centenary-community-buildings-conference including details of how to book your place.