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Economic Development

NSPCC to join aspirational Grimsby renewable box park scheme

Childrens' charity underlines importance of providing a future that can be seen with town centre involvement

Early meetings: Projekt director Richard Askam, third left, with Jose Stewart, business growth coach and Grimsby Town Centre Ambassador with 2025 Group - a new business-led organisation for the area; Joanne Allen, PR, content and storytelling lead at Knapton Wright, Projekt's marketing partner and Chloe McKeown, social media and marketing manager at Mockingbird Street Food.(Image: Gary Davies Photography)

The NSPCC has become a patron of Grimsby’s inspiration-providing Projekt Renewable box park.

The childrens’ charity is now looking to commission work on bringing its own container to life at the Alexandra Dock site, where career opportunities in green energy are to be showcased, fostering aspiration about the potential for individuals on their own doorstep.

Phase one arrived in August with work ongoing ahead of launch. The plan was first revealed late last year, having been worked up between industry and the local authority.

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Bernie Taylor, development manager for Together for Childhood Grimsby, NSPCC, said: “We’re delighted to be working with Projekt Renewable to amplify the voices of our local children and bring some of their wishes to life. Alongside partners in the Together for

Childhood project, we’re invested in building community capacity so families can thrive – to do that, we need to work together to build the knowledge and awareness of what’s possible and ensure inclusive access to the right knowledge, learning and skills building for the whole community.

“That’s why Projekt Renewable is the perfect place for us to position our next activity, because of our shared commitment to being designed and led by the people who will use it, with a sharp focus on a safer, sustainable future.”

It looks set to join the first trio of containers, with RWE, Myenergi and a creative studio set to inhabit those now being fitted, with plans to introduce virtual reality immersive learning and understanding of Grimsby’s great green industry - often hidden away on docks, at sea and in factories.