Express & Star

Saltwells Nature Reserve to have permanent base built after 10 year battle to protect land

A £450,000 Saltwells Nature Reserve base is set to be given the green light with plans for it to offer classes for schoolchildren and apprenticeships.

Published
Lucy Atherton, vice-chair of the Friends of Saltwells Nature Reserve, David Keeley, countryside manager at Dudley Council, with Councillor Karen Shakespeare, cabinet member for environment, highways and street services.

It will be the first permanent building on the site in nearly a decade and it is hoped the move will end the threat of housing developments on the 247 acre-reserve.

The old base near the former Saltwells House was demolished in 2010. Since then developers have shown interest with a recent application to build nine homes there.

But there was a wave of opposition against those plans with more than 1,000 people backing a campaign against it before Dudley Council rejected it.

Now the council has agreed to invest thousands of pounds in building a new base which will go on council-owned land next to the entrance of the site in Coppice Lane.

The new reserve building will provide a base for the wardens and will include a classroom for children. It will also provide a base for the Friends of Saltwells Nature Reserve with the long-term vision for it to be further developed into a fully-fledged visitor centre with school visits, educational activities and forest schooling opportunities.

Councillor Karen Shakespeare, cabinet member for environment, highways and street services said: “We know that not only is there a real business need for a new, purpose-built base on site but also that there is a real community drive for this.

We’ve decided that investing in Saltwells will benefit the reserve, the immediate community and the younger generation through a range of educational, training and apprenticeship opportunities.”

Proposals go to cabinet today and if agreed, tenders will be sought.