Church earns gold award for eco efforts

The frontage of St Stephen's Church in Willington on a sunny winter day. There are thousands of brown leaves in front of the church and the trees are bare. The church is a classically old building with gravestones outside in the yard.
St Stephen's Church is the second in the Durham Diocese to receive an Eco Church Award [Dioceses of Newcastle and Durham]

A church that introduced bird boxes, hedgehog shelters and a wildflower garden has been handed gold award eco status.

St Stephen's Church in Willington carried out a range of projects, including using its churchyard for schools to conduct nature trails, over 18 months.

Following St Mary Magdalene Church, it is the second in the Durham Diocese to receive the Eco Church Award from the Christian conservation charity, A Rocha UK.

St Stephen's said it had been a "huge effort" with "tireless contributions with people from our church and the wider community".

A wooden bird box is fixed onto a tree.
St Stephen's Church introduced bird boxes, hedgehog shelters and a wildflower garden on its site [Dioceses of Newcastle and Durham]

In a partnership with schools, Greater Willington Town Council and Durham County Council, the project included planting 1,500 daffodil bulbs, flower beds in Willington town green and the transformation of a former coal mining site.

Committee chairs David and Carole Parker said bird identification in the area had inspired the start of a trial for local schools.

"We have mutually helped each other to develop green spaces both within the church and in the wider community," Mr Parker said.

A black water butt stands next to an old wall
A key element of getting the gold award was the installation of a standalone water butt [Dioceses of Newcastle and Durham]

The church's environment committee added that volunteers have helped identify trees in the churchyard, including a rare black poplar.

The Reverend Claire Gibbs from the Diocese of Durham, said: "St Stephen's is now becoming a source of information, support and inspiration to other churches in the diocese - from large to small.

Ms Parker said: "This journey won't stop with gold... we will keep trying to developing these projects".

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