In This Issue
Decco set to make Glee debut in 2026
Sunnii Lifestyle unveils 2027 outdoor furniture collections
Why more garden centres are discovering the power of pre-designed canopies
Zest expands outdoor entertaining collection at SOLEX
RHS and Bramblecrest extend outdoor furniture collaboration
BeefEater set to unveil Proline Series Gen 2 at SOLEX
Kettler supports trade partners with new asset portal
Mental health charity Plants and Minds seeks new Trustees and Chair to drive growth
British Garden Centres' Libby and Phillippa Stubbs conquer Kilimanjaro
GIMA's Tillington Buyer Connect delivers meaningful new business conversations
GCA launches sponsorship packages for 2027 annual conference
Garden Trading reports record Q2 results 
Get your copy of GTN Xtra
Foxbury Fields Vineyard celebrates 10th anniversary
Caitlin Moran and Adam Frost announce new digital entertainment franchise
SPS agreement and plant health among top topics for HTA and European counterparts at meeting in Dublin
Put nature back into people’s everyday lives, urges Wyevale Nurseries
The Horti House strengthens UK and Dutch expertise with two appointments 
Lavender takes centre stage in the medicinal Garden at Merriments
Lemon tree sales jump 613% as shoppers embrace Mediterranean gardens
AIPH World Green City Awards 2026
Gardening and DIY retailers must time promotions
The best of last week's
Melcourt's Andy Chalmers retires after 60 years’ service to the industry
Golf day drives Greenfingers Charity Kilimanjaro total even higher
Tribute to John Ravenscroft from past HTA President Alan Down
Acquisition strengthens UK horticultural sector
Glee's exhibitor line-up keeps growing
Corby + Fellas welcomes another Choice member
Zest adds to modular outdoor entertaining collection
Supremo sets benchmark for outdoor living
Stay one step ahead of the weather with Workforce Manager AI
Greenfingers Charity thanks supporters following spectacular Summer Ball
The countdown to SOLEX 2026 is on!
GTN's SOLEX 2026 Preview is packed with exhibitor news
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Put nature back into people’s everyday lives, urges Wyevale Nurseries

 

Wyevale Nurseries is calling for better implementation of smarter biodiversity planning initiatives to create built environments where nature is part of everyday life – improving people’s wellbeing through access to green space.

 

While Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) is the framework for bridging the gap, it wants to see more planting being done to turn Cecil Konijnendijk’s 3-30-300 Rule into reality across development projects.

 

Kersten Catella, Sales and Marketing Director at Hereford-based Wyevale Nurseries, explains: “The rule, first proposed by the urban forestry expert in 2021, focuses on what residents can see and reach daily.

 

“The thinking behind it is that there should: three trees visible from every building, 30% canopy cover in every neighbourhood and people should have access to green space within 300 metres from where they are. Studies consistently show that simply seeing natural elements – even from indoors – can boost and support positive mental wellbeing. Trees are so important for human beings and we’ve lost sight of this.

 

“We’re raising awareness of the 3-30-300 vision, but it’s the BNG that provides the framework to help make it happen. It ensures that trees and green infrastructure are not token gestures, but core components of how developments are designed, delivered and managed over time and we need more of this to start making a meaningful difference to people’s lives.

 

“We believe BNG straddles the divide between aspiration and implementation, ensuring trees and green infrastructure are planned, measurable and managed long-term rather than treated as a last-minute addition.”

 

BNG has marked a fundamental shift in how biodiversity is considered within development, moving it from a ‘nice-to-have’ aspiration to a measurable, enforceable requirement.

 

Developers must now demonstrate a minimum 10% net gain in biodiversity value, changing the way planting, habitat creation and long-term landscape management are approached.

 

Kersten continues: “It’s so important to go further than the minimum when new developments are built. More trees are better for everyone. Towns and cities are under increasing pressure from climate change, rising temperatures, densification and growing demands on public space. At the same time, awareness of the links between nature and quality of life have never been greater.

 

“Trees play a critical role in addressing many of these challenges. They provide shade, reduce urban heat, capture carbon, improve air quality and create habitat – while also delivering less tangible benefits such as stress reduction and improved mental health.”

 

Under BNG, habitat creation is planned rather than incidental, planting schemes are quantified rather than purely aesthetic, and long-term stewardship is embedded from the outset. This prompts a more searching question at the heart of development design: what does this space actually deliver over time?

 

It is a question that closely aligns with the aims of the 3-30-300 Rule – the urban greening framework that calls for three trees visible from every home.

 

While 3-30-300 is rooted in human experience, visibility and access, BNG approaches the same ambition through biodiversity metrics, habitat value and policy compliance.

 

 

Although BNG is often discussed in terms of policy and compliance, Wyevale Nurseries believes it represents one of the most practical mechanisms available for embedding the principles behind 3-30-300 into real places.

 

By pushing biodiversity considerations earlier in the design process and requiring robust measurement and management, BNG helps ensure green infrastructure delivers lasting value.

 

Across housing, public realm and infrastructure projects, Wyevale Nurseries is seeing growing demand for trees, hedging and plants that do more than meet a specification.

 

Clients are increasingly seeking planting that supports biodiversity objectives, withstands changing climatic conditions and contributes to healthier, more resilient environments.

 

Kersten adds: “These are the building blocks of the 3-30-300 ideal. By integrating biodiversity and tree planting from day one, developments are better placed to create places where nature is not incidental, but part of everyday life – for people and wildlife alike.”

 

 

Wyevale Nurseries supplies a wide range of UK-grown trees, hedging and plants to support developments seeking to meet both BNG requirements and broader urban greening ambitions.

 

Founded in 1930 and still family‑owned, it manages 800 acres of production across multiple sites.

 

As a wholesale grower and supplier of trees, shrubs, hedging and herbaceous plants, Wyevale Nurseries serves the professional trade nationwide, including landscape contractors, local authorities, housebuilders, commercial estates, garden centres and plant retailers.

 

One of the last remaining large general nurseries in the UK with its own propagation unit, it grows the majority of its stock in‑house.

 

This gives clients access to UK‑grown, traceable plants, backed by robust health protocols and acclimatisation standards that reduce failure risk and contractor liability.

 

For further details about Wyevale Nurseries or to find out more, please call 01432 845 200 or visit www.wyevalenurseries.co.uk.

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