EPISODE · Aug 20, 2025 · 54 MIN
Green Streets: How a Croydon Community Transformed Their Neighbourhood
from Do London Differently by London National Park City · host Rangers
When Andrea Perry first looked at the neglected green patch near her home in Addiscombe, Croydon, it was a no-go zone nicknamed “Dog Poo Park” — littered with syringes, broken glass, and rubbish. Few dared to step inside.Fast forward a few years, and the same space is now Dartnell Park — alive with fruit trees, wildflowers, colourful benches, and even a wiggly path for children and dogs. It’s all thanks to Andrea and a group of neighbours who went on to create Croydon’s first official Green Street on Laurier Road.In this episode, we explore:🌱 The seed of an idea – How Andrea’s community greening journey began with 12 neighbours in a rainy church hall. 🌸 What makes a Green Street – From pollinator planting in tree pits to negotiating with the council to stop glyphosate spraying. 🤝 Building community through gardening – How monthly working parties (fuelled by coffee and cake!) brought people together and reduced fly-tipping. 🐝 Why glyphosate matters – The case against harmful weedkillers and Croydon Climate Action’s push for spray-free streets. 💡 Practical tips – How you can start your own Green Street, from winning neighbour support to choosing safe, pollinator-friendly plants. 🌍 The bigger vision – Connecting streets into biodiversity corridors that link parks, schools, and neighbourhoods across London.Andrea’s story is proof that persistence, planting, and people-power can turn bleak spaces into thriving ones. As she says: “Gardening and sweeping are exercise outdoors. Do it with other people and you’re ticking every wellbeing box possible — plus you’re building a sense of belonging.”Croydon Climate Action GroupExplore more London National Park City Podcasts
What this episode covers
When Andrea Perry first looked at the neglected green patch near her home in Addiscombe, Croydon, it was a no-go zone nicknamed “Dog Poo Park” — littered with syringes, broken glass, and rubbish. Few dared to step inside. Fast forward a few years, and the same space is now Dartnell Park — alive with fruit trees, wildflowers, colourful benches, and even a wiggly path for children and dogs. It’s all thanks to Andrea and a group of neighbours who went on to create Croydon’s first official Green ...
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Green Streets: How a Croydon Community Transformed Their Neighbourhood
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