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Grand Designs grows a 'greener' garden for the world's poor
06 Sep 2007 10:38:00 GMT
Christian Aid
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Christian Aid's Green Garden at Grand Designs
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Christian Aid's Green Garden at Grand Designs
Christian Aid/David Rose
Visitors to Grand Designs Live NEC, Birmingham (5-7 Oct 2007) will be invited to visit the ultimate Green Garden and learn how to transform their own gardens stylishly while helping to tackle climate change. Sustainability is the central theme for the 2007 show and the Green Garden created by Christian Aid and the Eden Project will be a highlight of the show.

Grand Designs Live is based on the successful talkback THAMES series for Channel 4, which is presented by design guru Kevin McCloud. 'We are committed to being as green as possible,' said Mr McCloud 'Sustainability has moved from being a fringe issue to something that touches every aspect of our lives.'

The Green Garden will showcase the latest eco-garden design and planting ideas, with innovative and unusual inspiration from Christian Aid's projects overseas.

Arranged under the branches of a giant baobab tree, the garden has been designed in four sections to appeal to gardeners of all abilities - from fledglings to green-fingered experts, from those with a solo window box to those with a 12-acre estate.

Admire the latest renewable energy devices, see how everyday throw-away objects can become stylish garden furniture, explore organic edible gardens, take a stroll on the recycled paths and learn how to create a living wall.

In the green theatre, hosted by the Eden Project, there will be a chance to hear thought-provoking performances and 'green' stories that will appeal to both adults and children. It's a place to escape from the hustle and bustle, and learn how to make our future brighter and greener. All features within the garden reflect and tell the story of how eco-living and renewable energy is being used by Christian Aid's projects around the world to help poor communities prepare for and adapt to the devastating effects of a changing climate. Visitors will be given a unique chance to find out about global climate change and see how they can make a difference.

Christian Aid will be asking visitors to the show to support their Climate Changed campaign, which highlights how the developing world is already on the frontline as climate change takes hold and 'natural' disasters increase. The campaign calls on the UK public to adopt a greener lifestyle and lobby the government and companies to commit to reducing their CO2 emissions.

- Ends - For press information, pictures or case studies, please contact Kate Wills on 020 7523 2446 kwills@christian-aid.org OR Emma Wigley on 020 7523 2321 ewigley@christian-aid.org For more information on Christian Aid and climate change visit www.christianaid.org.uk Tickets for Grand Designs Live, which runs 5-7 Oct at NEC, Birmingham, cost £18 on the day, £14 in advance and can be obtained by calling the 24-hour box office on 0870 380 0354 or by visiting www.granddesignslive.com Notes to editors: 1. Christian Aid works in some of the world's poorest communities in nearly 50 countries. We act where the need is greatest, regardless of religion, helping people build the life they deserve. 2. Christian Aid's Climate Changed campaign: Christian Aid has launched a major new campaign to get the UK to cut its CO2 emissions by five per cent a year by changing what we do at home and in the workplace and by lobbying the government and companies. If we don't stop climate change, it's the world's poorest communities who will pay the price. 3. Christian Aid and the Eden Project are members of the Stop Climate Chaos coalition and support its aim to build a massive movement that will create an irresistible public mandate for political action to stop human-induced climate change. 4. GRAND DESIGNS LIVE is based on the talkback THAMES series for Channel 4, which is presented by design guru Kevin McCloud. The event, which has evolved into a spectacularly vibrant show and changed the face of the interiors exhibition industry forever, aims to inform, excite and inspire visitors to create their own grand design - with everything they need from around the world available to purchase under one roof. 5. GRAND DESIGNS LIVE - whether you're buying a cushion or building a home, it's a Grand Design! Grand Designs Live is made up of six sections: GRANDBuild, GRANDGardens, GRANDInteriors, GRANDKitchens, GRANDBathrooms and DESIGNShopping Arcade - catering for a broad spectrum of visitor requirements.

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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People wade through a flooded section of the Pan-American Highway in Chinandega City, some 150 km west (94 miles) of Managua, October 14, 2007. Emergency officials across Central America worked to clean up towns inundated by recent deadly floods and landslides, and braced for more bad weather on Sunday. In Nicaragua, at least 4,000 people were evacuated when a banana growing region was put on red alert because of the flood risk. At least 10,000 people were considered at risk in Nicaragua.



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