Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

Glasshouses relocated and repurposed to provide quality growing facility for Guernsey-based charity

CambridgeHOK has supported a Guernsey charity in the relocation and transformation of two redundant glasshouses into a modern facility fit for decades of future use.

Described as the ‘largest recycling project ever completed’ on the island, the work was managed and overseen by our team for Guernsey’s Rural Occupational Workshop (GROW).

The charity provides training and a sheltered work environment in horticulture for people with various disabilities and an interest in a career associated to horticulture or related craft industries.

It grows and sells seasonal fruits and vegetables on-site, both in its shop and café, as well as summer bedding, perennials, shrubs, and hedging.

The project saw the two existing glasshouses carefully dismantled before being rebuilt at a new site with additional equipment, including doors and motorized venting installed.

This ensures the facility will be able to continue to provide the ideal growing environment for both vegetables and ornamental plants well into the future.

Once complete, the entire glasshouse was washed both inside and out, leaving the charity with a stunning facility that looked as good as new throughout.

The Venlo-style glasshouse also provided GROW with a ‘veranda’ type selling space, allowing them to display a full range of plants for sale to the public.

Project completed in 14 weeks
The job was completed over a 14-week period, split into two phases for the dismantling and reconstruction works. Dismantling works were completed in late 2022, with the reconstruction phase completed in April 2023.

Elliot Wrightson, Project Manager at CambridgeHOK, said: “This was a technically challenging project as can be expected when not only relocating two existing glasshouses but also combining them into one.

“As a result, this was a highly rewarding scheme, and to see it come together successfully, providing a fantastic new facility for such a worthwhile charity in GROW, was very satisfying both personally and for the whole project team.”

For more information:
CambridgeHOK
Tel.: +44(0)1430 449440
info@cambridgeglasshouse.co.uk
www.cambridgehok.co.uk      

Publication date: