Swindon Borough Council
Swindon Borough Council
6 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2009Partners:CABE Space, Mayer Brown, Help The Aged, EDI Group, PEABODY +54 partnersCABE Space,Mayer Brown,Help The Aged,EDI Group,PEABODY,Aberdeen City Council,Office of the Deputy Prime Minister,English Courtyard Developments Ltd,DfT,BioTransformations Ltd,Peter Brett Associates,Elwood Landscape Design,Greenspace Scotland (United Kingdom),Age UK,Sustrans,Health and Safety Executive,Jacobs Babtie,ELD,HCA,Design Council,Peabody Trust,PRP Architects Ltd,Phil Jones Associates Ltd,Age UK,CABE Space,Greenspace Scotland,Aberdeen City Council,Sustrans,Office of the Deputy Prime Minister,English Courtyard Developments Ltd,IHE,Institute of Highway Engineers,EDAW,Mayer Brown,EDI Group,Homes and Communities Agency,Royal Institute of British Architects,PJA,Historic Bldgs & Mnts Commis for England,OBU,DCLG,JMU Access Partnership,Marshalls Mono Ltd,Royal Inst of British Architects RIBA,Oxford Brookes University,Historic England,OSJCT,The Orders of St John's Care Trust,Health and Safety Executive,JMU Access Partnership,Marshalls Mono Ltd,BioTransformations Ltd,PBA,Swindon Borough Council,Department for Transport,EDAW plc,PRP Architects Ltd,Babtie Ltd (Glasgow),Swindon Borough CouncilFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/D07973X/1Funder Contribution: 447,789 GBPThe I'DGO research consortium has a continuing overall aim to identify the most effective ways of ensuring that the outdoor environment is designed inclusively and with sensitivity to the needs and desires of older people, to improve their quality of life. In focusing on the changing needs of older people, the consortium will address issues that are relevant to a much wider range of people in society as a whole, including disabled people, frail or vulnerable people and those who care for them. The proposed research under I'DGO TOO combines the skills and experience of three research centres and academic colleagues across five academic institutions. It brings this expertise together with that of a range of collaborators from different organisations, agencies and groups, ranging from ODPM to Age Concern, who are keen to use the findings of the research and benefit from it,I'DGO TOO focuses on particular policies and strategies that are currently being promoted by government as part of the sustainability agenda / urban renaissance, integrated communities and inclusive environments / where the potentially important, practical implications for older people's lives have not fully been explored and tested. It investigates how well outdoor environments in certain types of development, built in line with these policies, contribute to older people's health and wellbeing. It does so through research at three different levels of detail. It explores the implications of denser urban living on open space in housing, pedestrian-friendly approaches (such as Home Zones) in street environments and the practical consequences of using tactile paving in the urban environment. A range of innovative methods, some of which have been developed in earlier research by the consortium, will be used to examine in detail how design, and older people's perceptions of the designed environment, make a difference. The voices of older people themselves are a key element in this research. I'DGO TOO recognises the great diversity and range of abilities, disabilities, aspirations, expectations and needs that are encompassed in the population of people over 65 years of age. From the beginning, older people will be involved in expressing what is important to them and in shaping the development of the programme. The approaches used treat older people and disabled people as co-researchers, rather than 'subjects', and the range of techniques place these people at the heart of the investigation. A number of different methods is used to ensure that diverse perspectives and evidence is collected to throw light on the questions and objectives of the research. The main issues to be addressed are: how residential outdoor space in higher-density 'urban renaissance' housing can best be delivered to optimise older residents' quality of life; whether Home Zones provide a good design solution in the context of an ageing population, and the implications of the design, siting, laying and use of tactile paving for older people.The implications of the findings will be important for policy-makers, planners, designers and other professionals working in the urban environment, as well as users of that environment. The research collaborators will help ensure that the outputs are useful and useable for the range of people and groups for whom this work is important. Guidance will be published in a range of formats and media, including attractive and accessible printed booklets as well as web-based publications targeted to suit the needs of different expert, academic, professional and lay audiences.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2023Partners:University of Reading, Loddon Valley Residents Association, UNIVERSITY OF READING, Swallowfield Flood Resilience Group, Foundation for Water Research +67 partnersUniversity of Reading,Loddon Valley Residents Association,UNIVERSITY OF READING,Swallowfield Flood Resilience Group,Foundation for Water Research,Penn Croft Farms Limited,Fincham Farm Partnership,Agrimetrics Ltd,The Wildlife Trusts (UK),Natural England,Natural England,Penn Croft Farms Limited,Hendred Farm Partnership,Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust,South East Rivers Trust,Foundation for Water Research,Wokingham Borough Council,GR Gantlett & Sons,The National Trust,Hart District Council,GR Gantlett & Sons,JBA Trust,NFU,Wild Oxfordshire,Freshwater Habitats Trust,JBA Trust,FWAG,National Farmers Union (NFU),Loddon Valley Residents Association,Swallowfield Flood Resilience Group,Freshwater Habitats Trust,Westcountry Rivers Trust,Wokingham Borough Council,West Berkshire Council,National Flood Forum,Kingsclere Estates Ltd,Forestry Commission England,JBA Consulting,Pang Valley Flood Forum,Fincham Farm Partnership,Westcountry Rivers Trust,Hendred Farm Partnership,Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group FWAG,Affinity Water,Soil Association,South East Rivers Trust,Action for the River Kennet (ARK),Three Valleys Water,Pang Valley Flood Forum,Wild Oxfordshire,Kingsclere Estates Ltd,Environment Agency,Forestry Commission UK,Freshwater Habitats Trust,National Trust,West Berkshire Council,Loddon Fisheries & Conserv Consult LFCC,[no title available],Hart District Council,University of Sheffield,EA,South East Rivers Trust,Affinity Water,Loddon Fisheries & Conserv Consult LFCC,DEFRA,University of Sheffield,Swindon Borough Council,Soil Association,National Flood Forum,ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,Swindon Borough Council,Agrimetrics LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/R004668/1Funder Contribution: 1,495,780 GBPLANDMARK (LAND MAnagement for flood RisK reduction in lowland catchments) will evaluate the effectiveness of realistic and scalable land-based NFM measures to reduce the risk from flooding from surface runoff, rivers and groundwater in groundwater-fed lowland catchments. We will study measures like crop choice, tillage practices and tree planting, that have been identified by people who own and manage land, to have the greatest realisable potential. NFM measures will be evaluated for their ability to increase infiltration, evaporative losses and/or below-ground water storage, thereby helping to store precipitation to reduce surface runoff and slow down the movement of water to reduce peak levels in groundwater and rivers. However, we need to carefully examine the balance between increased infiltration, soil water storage and evaporative losses under different types of NFM measures, because long-term increases in infiltration could actually increase groundwater and river flood risk if there is less capacity within the ground and in rivers to store excess precipitation from storm events. Also, following a review of the available research to date, other researchers (Dadson et al, 2017) came to the conclusion that land-based NFM measures would only provide effective protection against small flood events in small catchments. As the catchment size and flood events increase, the effectiveness of land-based NFM measures in reducing flood risk would decrease significantly. However, this idea needs to be tested further. Currently, there are many unanswered gaps in knowledge that make it hard to include land-based NFM measures in flood risk mitigation schemes. The Environment Agency tell us that there are no case studies on land-based NFM measures to support decision making, with most focusing on leaky barriers made from trees. Yet, land-based NFM measures have potential to do more than just reduce flood risk, including improving water quality, biodiversity and sustainable food and fibre production. So in LANDMARK, we will carry out research to help to fill this evidence gap, and test the ideas Dadson et al. proposed about land-based NFM using the West Thames River Basin as a case-study area. We will work at three spatial scales (field, catchment and large river basin) and explore modelling scenarios, developed with people who own and manage land and live at risk of flooding, to look at how land-based NFM could affect flooding. Scenarios will include experiences in the recent past in July 2007 and over the winter of 2013-14, and how future land use and management could affect flood risk in 2050 as the climate changes. We will consider how government policy could change after we leave the EU to support land-based NFM. Work will be carried out in five stages: (1) we will bring together available maps, data and local knowledge on current land use and management, and use this to create scenarios for modelling experiments to explore land use and management measures impact on events from the past and in the future; (2) we will make measurements to see how below-ground water storage and infiltration vary between different land-based NFM in fields where innovative land management is being practiced; (3) we will collect data from sensors sitting above the ground, flying on drones and on satellites to see how vegetation and soil moisture vary across large catchment areas; (4) we will use all the data collected from 1-3 to run modelling experiments across a range of scales, linking together models that capture soil and vegetation processes, overland and groundwater flows and catchment hydrology, exploring variation in model outputs; and (5) we will create web applications to display and explore the outputs from the modelling experiments. All this work will be supported by workshops, field visits, reports and resources to support people and their learning about how land-based NFM measures work and could be used to reduce flood risk.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2011Partners:Mayer Brown, BioTransformations Ltd, PBA, Swindon Borough Council, Department for Transport +55 partnersMayer Brown,BioTransformations Ltd,PBA,Swindon Borough Council,Department for Transport,EDAW plc,PRP Architects Ltd,Babtie Ltd (Glasgow),Swindon Borough Council,ELD,Greenspace Scotland (United Kingdom),HCA,University of Edinburgh,English Courtyard Developments Ltd,Age UK,BioTransformations Ltd,Elwood Landscape Design,DfT,Peter Brett Associates,Design Council,Peabody Trust,PRP Architects Ltd,Phil Jones Associates Ltd,Age UK,CABE Space,Help The Aged,EDI Group,Aberdeen City Council,PEABODY,Jacobs Babtie,CABE Space,Greenspace Scotland,Aberdeen City Council,Office of the Deputy Prime Minister,Sustrans,Health and Safety Executive,Mayer Brown,EDI Group,Homes and Communities Agency,Royal Institute of British Architects,Marshalls Mono Ltd,PJA,Historic Bldgs & Mnts Commis for England,Royal Inst of British Architects RIBA,Historic England,OSJCT,The Orders of St John's Care Trust,Health and Safety Executive,JMU Access Partnership,Sustrans,Office of the Deputy Prime Minister,English Courtyard Developments Ltd,IHE,Institute of Highway Engineers,EDAW,Edinburgh College of Art,Landscape Institute,DCLG,JMU Access Partnership,Marshalls Mono LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/D079861/1Funder Contribution: 674,958 GBPThe I'DGO research consortium has a continuing overall aim to identify the most effective ways of ensuring that the outdoor environment is designed inclusively and with sensitivity to the needs and desires of older people, to improve their quality of life. In focusing on the changing needs of older people, the consortium will address issues that are relevant to a much wider range of people in society as a whole, including disabled people, frail or vulnerable people and those who care for them. The proposed research under I'DGO TOO combines the skills and experience of three research centres and academic colleagues across five academic institutions. It brings this expertise together with that of a range of collaborators from different organisations, agencies and groups, ranging from ODPM to Age Concern, who are keen to use the findings of the research and benefit from it,I'DGO TOO focuses on particular policies and strategies that are currently being promoted by government as part of the sustainability agenda / urban renaissance, integrated communities and inclusive environments / where the potentially important, practical implications for older people's lives have not fully been explored and tested. It investigates how well outdoor environments in certain types of development, built in line with these policies, contribute to older people's health and wellbeing. It does so through research at three different levels of detail. It explores the implications of denser urban living on open space in housing, pedestrian-friendly approaches (such as Home Zones) in street environments and the practical consequences of using tactile paving in the urban environment. A range of innovative methods, some of which have been developed in earlier research by the consortium, will be used to examine in detail how design, and older people's perceptions of the designed environment, make a difference. The voices of older people themselves are a key element in this research. I'DGO TOO recognises the great diversity and range of abilities, disabilities, aspirations, expectations and needs that are encompassed in the population of people over 65 years of age. From the beginning, older people will be involved in expressing what is important to them and in shaping the development of the programme. The approaches used treat older people and disabled people as co-researchers, rather than 'subjects', and the range of techniques place these people at the heart of the investigation. A number of different methods is used to ensure that diverse perspectives and evidence is collected to throw light on the questions and objectives of the research. The main issues to be addressed are: how residential outdoor space in higher-density 'urban renaissance' housing can best be delivered to optimise older residents' quality of life; whether Home Zones provide a good design solution in the context of an ageing population, and the implications of the design, siting, laying and use of tactile paving for older people.The implications of the findings will be important for policy-makers, planners, designers and other professionals working in the urban environment, as well as users of that environment. The research collaborators will help ensure that the outputs are useful and useable for the range of people and groups for whom this work is important. Guidance will be published in a range of formats and media, including attractive and accessible printed booklets as well as web-based publications targeted to suit the needs of different expert, academic, professional and lay audiences.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2012 - 2012Partners:SWINDON BOROUGH COUNCIL, Swindon Borough CouncilSWINDON BOROUGH COUNCIL,Swindon Borough CouncilFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: 130969Funder Contribution: 50,000 GBPSwindon Borough Council has ambitious plans for a low carbon future which benefits the economy with new jobs and skills, whilst providing for a better quality of life for existing and future residents of the Borough. Bringing together three key Swindon projects around hydrogen, district energy and 4G communications, the Future Swindon proposition is for an integrated smart district energy system supplying heat, cooling, electricity and hydrogen, utilising hydrogen as a storage device with a dynamic link to the buildings and vehicles it serves. This project provides a chance to explore how we can integrate existing projects which are ground breaking in their own right to achieve something even better for the town.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2011Partners:Mayer Brown, Aberdeen City Council, ELD, HCA, BioTransformations Ltd +54 partnersMayer Brown,Aberdeen City Council,ELD,HCA,BioTransformations Ltd,Elwood Landscape Design,Greenspace Scotland (United Kingdom),Age UK,CABE Space,Help The Aged,EDI Group,PEABODY,Office of the Deputy Prime Minister,Sustrans,Health and Safety Executive,Jacobs Babtie,English Courtyard Developments Ltd,CABE Space,Greenspace Scotland,Aberdeen City Council,DfT,Design Council,Peabody Trust,PRP Architects Ltd,Phil Jones Associates Ltd,Age UK,Peter Brett Associates,Mayer Brown,EDI Group,Homes and Communities Agency,Royal Institute of British Architects,PJA,Historic Bldgs & Mnts Commis for England,Royal Inst of British Architects RIBA,Historic England,University of Salford,OSJCT,The Orders of St John's Care Trust,Health and Safety Executive,JMU Access Partnership,DCLG,JMU Access Partnership,Marshalls Mono Ltd,Sustrans,Office of the Deputy Prime Minister,English Courtyard Developments Ltd,IHE,Institute of Highway Engineers,EDAW,University of Salford,Marshalls Mono Ltd,BioTransformations Ltd,PBA,Swindon Borough Council,Department for Transport,EDAW plc,PRP Architects Ltd,Babtie Ltd (Glasgow),Swindon Borough CouncilFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/D079640/1Funder Contribution: 479,960 GBPThe I'DGO Research Consortium has a continuing overall aim to identify the most effective ways of ensuring that the outdoor environment is designed inclusively and with sensitivity to the needs and desires of older people, to improve their quality of life. In focusing on the changing needs of older people, the Consortium will address issues that are relevant to a much wider range of people in society as a whole, including disabled people, frail or vulnerable people and those who care for them. The proposed research under I'DGO TOO combines the skills and experience of three research centres and academic colleagues across five academic institutions. It brings this expertise together with that of a range of collaborators from different organisations, agencies and groups, ranging from ODPM to Age Concern, who are keen to use the findings of the research and benefit from it,I'DGO TOO focuses on particular policies and strategies that are currently being promoted by government as part of the sustainability agenda / urban renaissance, integrated communities and inclusive environments / where the potentially important, practical implications for older people's lives have not fully been explored and tested. It investigates how well outdoor environments in certain types of development, built in line with these policies, contribute to older people's health and wellbeing. It does so through research at three different levels of detail. It explores the implications of denser urban living on open space in housing, pedestrian-friendly approaches (such as Home Zones) in street environments and the practical consequences of using tactile paving in the urban environment. A range of innovative methods, some of which have been developed in earlier research by the consortium, will be used to examine in detail how design, and older people's perceptions of the designed environment, make a difference. The voices of older people themselves are a key element in this research. I'DGO TOO recognises the great diversity and range of abilities, disabilities, aspirations, expectations and needs that are encompassed in the population of people over 65 years of age. From the beginning, older people will be involved in expressing what is important to them and in shaping the development of the programme. The approaches used treat older people and disabled people as co-researchers, rather than 'subjects', and the range of techniques place these people at the heart of the investigation. A number of different methods is used to ensure that diverse perspectives and evidence is collected to throw light on the questions and objectives of the research. The main issues to be addressed are: how residential outdoor space in higher-density 'urban renaissance' housing can best be delivered to optimise older residents' quality of life; whether Home Zones provide a good design solution in the context of an ageing population, and the implications of the design, siting, laying and use of tactile paving for older people?The implications of the findings will be important for policy-makers, planners, designers and other professionals working in the urban environment, as well as users of that environment. The research collaborators will help ensure that the outputs are useful and useable for the range of people and groups for whom this work is important. Guidance will be published in a range of formats and media, including attractive and accessible printed booklets as well as web-based publications targeted to suit the needs of different expert, academic, professional and lay audiences.
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