COOKIE STATUS:

New green scheme will transform derelict east London sites

Derelict land in three east London boroughs could be transformed into thriving growing spaces under a new scheme being launched by a community charity.

Two members of the British Bangla Welfare Trust hold up a bag of seed with the Trust's banner behind t hem.
Azam Khan with Khosruzzaman Khosru of the British Bangla Welfare Trust
  • Published: 14 April 2025

The British Bangla Welfare Trust is looking for potential sites in Tower Hamlets, Newham and Redbridge which could be put to use as community gardens or other community spaces.

The Stratford-based charity will also rally volunteers to help residents learn more about growing and cooking their own food, recycling and reducing waste.

The project is being funded with a £57,000 grant from City Bridge Foundation – the owner of five Thames crossings and the capital’s biggest independent charity funder.

There are huge health benefits to getting out in nature, getting your hands in the soil and growing and cooking your own food.

This scheme will not only help boost east Londoners physical and mental health, it will turn disused land into thriving community spaces and help improve the environment.

City Bridge Foundation chair Paul Martinelli

British Bangla Welfare Trust was founded in 2012 by Khosruzzaman Khosru with the aim of supporting Bengali communities in the UK and in Bangladesh.

Its previous work has included supporting homeless people in east London and providing emergency aid in the aftermath of natural disasters in Bangladesh.

The charity is also using the City Bridge Foundation to distribute seeds to enable members of Bengali communities in east London to grow their own fruit and vegetables.

During lockdown, a lot of people in the community started doing gardening and growing their own food as a way of getting out of the house.

With this project we hope to encourage more of that by finding spaces which can be improved and providing volunteers who can help transform them and create a nice environment we can all live in and be proud of.

Khosruzzaman Khosru, British Bangla Welfare Trust founder

Anyone who knows of a space in need of transforming, or who would like to volunteer to take part in the scheme, is asked to get in touch with the trust.

It can be contacted by visiting the charity’s shop in The Grove, Stratford, by calling 020 8534 8777 or via its website at www.britishbanglawelfaretrust.org.uk

In the three years to 2024, City Bridge Foundation awarded £7.2m to projects which improve the environment or tackle the climate emergency, including those which reduce emissions or tackle poor air quality; boost open spaces or promote biodiversity.

It has also committed £15 million to meet the aims of the foundation’s ambitious Climate Action Strategy, which commits it to achieving net zero in its operations by 2027.