{"id":2673,"date":"2020-02-11T12:33:58","date_gmt":"2020-02-11T12:33:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/"},"modified":"2022-01-20T16:28:25","modified_gmt":"2022-01-20T16:28:25","slug":"watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village","status":"publish","type":"jb_resources","link":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/","title":{"rendered":"Watts Gallery: It Takes A Village"},"content":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"tags":[21,59,80],"resource_cat":[7],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nWatts Gallery: It Takes A Village - Julie's Bicycle<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"With grade I and II listed arts and crafts buildings, Watts Gallery Artists Village, nestled into the Surrey Hills in an area of outstanding natural beauty, environmental awareness and responsibility, is deep rooted in the gallery\u2019s ethos. They have had a big focus on energy, from improving insulation, window glazing and solar shading to installing new high efficiency boilers and LED lighting and using passive\/low energy ventilation. The venue is also supplied by on-site renewable energy via ground-source heat pumps and a solar-thermal hot water system. Energy management is just the beginning The success of energy reduction measures has led to the gallery turning efforts to water and waste management as well. The gallery has been recycling rainwater for over a hundred years, harvested via an underground cistern, for use in maintaining their gardens and woodlands. This practise has now inspired the ways water is used and procured on the ground, forwarding to the development of wastewater recycling. They now recycle wastewater via an on-site sewage recycling system and have installed water-efficient kitchen devices which has successfully reduced water use in their kitchens by 50%. Not only thinking about waste, but how waste translates to secondary impacts, is a reflection in the behaviour changes within the gallery. Not only is waste recycled, they have sourced a recycling company that shares and is committed to their environmental outlook. Prioritising local sustainable materials Owing to the surrounding natural beauty, sustainable materials have been procured and used both internally and externally, ranging from clay roof tiles and Forestry Stewardship Council certified timber, to sheep wool thermal insulation and natural oil and water-based paints and varnishes. [caption id="attachment_3179" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Image: Watts Gallery \u2013 Artists\u2019 Village[\/caption] The grounds have made well for allotment produce and compostable serve ware are provided in the tea shop. Making small changes like replacing plastic with paper bags in their shop, in collaboration with Art Fund, has saved over 100,000 plastic bags so far. Weaving in environmentally friendly alternatives has shown small changes make huge differences. \u201cThe programme has supported Watts Gallery Trust thus far by providing us with key tools to develop best practice, particularly in reporting requirements. The one-to-one support received from Julie\u2019s Bicycle under Arts Council England\u2019s Environmental Programme contributed considerably to the development of the Trust\u2019s environmental policy and action plan which is now in place, as well as assisting in the reporting of site emissions.\u201d Watts Gallery Trust, Surrey Feeling Inspired? Find out about how your organisation could rise to the climate challenge through our Creative Green Certification Programme - which inspires and celebrates environmental best practice for events, venues, museums, galleries, festivals and offices across the creative sector. Find out more and apply now! Images courtesy of Watts Gallery Trust\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Watts Gallery: It Takes A Village - Julie's Bicycle\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"With grade I and II listed arts and crafts buildings, Watts Gallery Artists Village, nestled into the Surrey Hills in an area of outstanding natural beauty, environmental awareness and responsibility, is deep rooted in the gallery\u2019s ethos. They have had a big focus on energy, from improving insulation, window glazing and solar shading to installing new high efficiency boilers and LED lighting and using passive\/low energy ventilation. The venue is also supplied by on-site renewable energy via ground-source heat pumps and a solar-thermal hot water system. Energy management is just the beginning The success of energy reduction measures has led to the gallery turning efforts to water and waste management as well. The gallery has been recycling rainwater for over a hundred years, harvested via an underground cistern, for use in maintaining their gardens and woodlands. This practise has now inspired the ways water is used and procured on the ground, forwarding to the development of wastewater recycling. They now recycle wastewater via an on-site sewage recycling system and have installed water-efficient kitchen devices which has successfully reduced water use in their kitchens by 50%. Not only thinking about waste, but how waste translates to secondary impacts, is a reflection in the behaviour changes within the gallery. Not only is waste recycled, they have sourced a recycling company that shares and is committed to their environmental outlook. Prioritising local sustainable materials Owing to the surrounding natural beauty, sustainable materials have been procured and used both internally and externally, ranging from clay roof tiles and Forestry Stewardship Council certified timber, to sheep wool thermal insulation and natural oil and water-based paints and varnishes. [caption id="attachment_3179" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Image: Watts Gallery \u2013 Artists\u2019 Village[\/caption] The grounds have made well for allotment produce and compostable serve ware are provided in the tea shop. Making small changes like replacing plastic with paper bags in their shop, in collaboration with Art Fund, has saved over 100,000 plastic bags so far. Weaving in environmentally friendly alternatives has shown small changes make huge differences. \u201cThe programme has supported Watts Gallery Trust thus far by providing us with key tools to develop best practice, particularly in reporting requirements. The one-to-one support received from Julie\u2019s Bicycle under Arts Council England\u2019s Environmental Programme contributed considerably to the development of the Trust\u2019s environmental policy and action plan which is now in place, as well as assisting in the reporting of site emissions.\u201d Watts Gallery Trust, Surrey Feeling Inspired? Find out about how your organisation could rise to the climate challenge through our Creative Green Certification Programme - which inspires and celebrates environmental best practice for events, venues, museums, galleries, festivals and offices across the creative sector. Find out more and apply now! Images courtesy of Watts Gallery Trust\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Julie's Bicycle\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2022-01-20T16:28:25+00:00\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/\",\"name\":\"Watts Gallery: It Takes A Village - Julie's Bicycle\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/#website\"},\"datePublished\":\"2020-02-11T12:33:58+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2022-01-20T16:28:25+00:00\",\"description\":\"With grade I and II listed arts and crafts buildings, Watts Gallery Artists Village, nestled into the Surrey Hills in an area of outstanding natural beauty, environmental awareness and responsibility, is deep rooted in the gallery\u2019s ethos. They have had a big focus on energy, from improving insulation, window glazing and solar shading to installing new high efficiency boilers and LED lighting and using passive\/low energy ventilation. The venue is also supplied by on-site renewable energy via ground-source heat pumps and a solar-thermal hot water system. Energy management is just the beginning The success of energy reduction measures has led to the gallery turning efforts to water and waste management as well. The gallery has been recycling rainwater for over a hundred years, harvested via an underground cistern, for use in maintaining their gardens and woodlands. This practise has now inspired the ways water is used and procured on the ground, forwarding to the development of wastewater recycling. They now recycle wastewater via an on-site sewage recycling system and have installed water-efficient kitchen devices which has successfully reduced water use in their kitchens by 50%. Not only thinking about waste, but how waste translates to secondary impacts, is a reflection in the behaviour changes within the gallery. Not only is waste recycled, they have sourced a recycling company that shares and is committed to their environmental outlook. Prioritising local sustainable materials Owing to the surrounding natural beauty, sustainable materials have been procured and used both internally and externally, ranging from clay roof tiles and Forestry Stewardship Council certified timber, to sheep wool thermal insulation and natural oil and water-based paints and varnishes. [caption id=\\\"attachment_3179\\\" align=\\\"alignnone\\\" width=\\\"1024\\\"] Image: Watts Gallery \u2013 Artists\u2019 Village[\/caption] The grounds have made well for allotment produce and compostable serve ware are provided in the tea shop. Making small changes like replacing plastic with paper bags in their shop, in collaboration with Art Fund, has saved over 100,000 plastic bags so far. Weaving in environmentally friendly alternatives has shown small changes make huge differences. \u201cThe programme has supported Watts Gallery Trust thus far by providing us with key tools to develop best practice, particularly in reporting requirements. The one-to-one support received from Julie\u2019s Bicycle under Arts Council England\u2019s Environmental Programme contributed considerably to the development of the Trust\u2019s environmental policy and action plan which is now in place, as well as assisting in the reporting of site emissions.\u201d Watts Gallery Trust, Surrey Feeling Inspired? Find out about how your organisation could rise to the climate challenge through our Creative Green Certification Programme - which inspires and celebrates environmental best practice for events, venues, museums, galleries, festivals and offices across the creative sector. Find out more and apply now! 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They have had a big focus on energy, from improving insulation, window glazing and solar shading to installing new high efficiency boilers and LED lighting and using passive\/low energy ventilation. The venue is also supplied by on-site renewable energy via ground-source heat pumps and a solar-thermal hot water system. Energy management is just the beginning The success of energy reduction measures has led to the gallery turning efforts to water and waste management as well. The gallery has been recycling rainwater for over a hundred years, harvested via an underground cistern, for use in maintaining their gardens and woodlands. This practise has now inspired the ways water is used and procured on the ground, forwarding to the development of wastewater recycling. They now recycle wastewater via an on-site sewage recycling system and have installed water-efficient kitchen devices which has successfully reduced water use in their kitchens by 50%. Not only thinking about waste, but how waste translates to secondary impacts, is a reflection in the behaviour changes within the gallery. Not only is waste recycled, they have sourced a recycling company that shares and is committed to their environmental outlook. Prioritising local sustainable materials Owing to the surrounding natural beauty, sustainable materials have been procured and used both internally and externally, ranging from clay roof tiles and Forestry Stewardship Council certified timber, to sheep wool thermal insulation and natural oil and water-based paints and varnishes. [caption id=\"attachment_3179\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"1024\"] Image: Watts Gallery \u2013 Artists\u2019 Village[\/caption] The grounds have made well for allotment produce and compostable serve ware are provided in the tea shop. Making small changes like replacing plastic with paper bags in their shop, in collaboration with Art Fund, has saved over 100,000 plastic bags so far. Weaving in environmentally friendly alternatives has shown small changes make huge differences. \u201cThe programme has supported Watts Gallery Trust thus far by providing us with key tools to develop best practice, particularly in reporting requirements. The one-to-one support received from Julie\u2019s Bicycle under Arts Council England\u2019s Environmental Programme contributed considerably to the development of the Trust\u2019s environmental policy and action plan which is now in place, as well as assisting in the reporting of site emissions.\u201d Watts Gallery Trust, Surrey Feeling Inspired? Find out about how your organisation could rise to the climate challenge through our Creative Green Certification Programme - which inspires and celebrates environmental best practice for events, venues, museums, galleries, festivals and offices across the creative sector. Find out more and apply now! Images courtesy of Watts Gallery Trust","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"Watts Gallery: It Takes A Village - Julie's Bicycle","og_description":"With grade I and II listed arts and crafts buildings, Watts Gallery Artists Village, nestled into the Surrey Hills in an area of outstanding natural beauty, environmental awareness and responsibility, is deep rooted in the gallery\u2019s ethos. They have had a big focus on energy, from improving insulation, window glazing and solar shading to installing new high efficiency boilers and LED lighting and using passive\/low energy ventilation. The venue is also supplied by on-site renewable energy via ground-source heat pumps and a solar-thermal hot water system. Energy management is just the beginning The success of energy reduction measures has led to the gallery turning efforts to water and waste management as well. The gallery has been recycling rainwater for over a hundred years, harvested via an underground cistern, for use in maintaining their gardens and woodlands. This practise has now inspired the ways water is used and procured on the ground, forwarding to the development of wastewater recycling. They now recycle wastewater via an on-site sewage recycling system and have installed water-efficient kitchen devices which has successfully reduced water use in their kitchens by 50%. Not only thinking about waste, but how waste translates to secondary impacts, is a reflection in the behaviour changes within the gallery. Not only is waste recycled, they have sourced a recycling company that shares and is committed to their environmental outlook. Prioritising local sustainable materials Owing to the surrounding natural beauty, sustainable materials have been procured and used both internally and externally, ranging from clay roof tiles and Forestry Stewardship Council certified timber, to sheep wool thermal insulation and natural oil and water-based paints and varnishes. [caption id=\"attachment_3179\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"1024\"] Image: Watts Gallery \u2013 Artists\u2019 Village[\/caption] The grounds have made well for allotment produce and compostable serve ware are provided in the tea shop. Making small changes like replacing plastic with paper bags in their shop, in collaboration with Art Fund, has saved over 100,000 plastic bags so far. Weaving in environmentally friendly alternatives has shown small changes make huge differences. \u201cThe programme has supported Watts Gallery Trust thus far by providing us with key tools to develop best practice, particularly in reporting requirements. The one-to-one support received from Julie\u2019s Bicycle under Arts Council England\u2019s Environmental Programme contributed considerably to the development of the Trust\u2019s environmental policy and action plan which is now in place, as well as assisting in the reporting of site emissions.\u201d Watts Gallery Trust, Surrey Feeling Inspired? Find out about how your organisation could rise to the climate challenge through our Creative Green Certification Programme - which inspires and celebrates environmental best practice for events, venues, museums, galleries, festivals and offices across the creative sector. Find out more and apply now! Images courtesy of Watts Gallery Trust","og_url":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/","og_site_name":"Julie's Bicycle","article_modified_time":"2022-01-20T16:28:25+00:00","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/","url":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/resource\/watts-gallery-it-takes-a-village\/","name":"Watts Gallery: It Takes A Village - Julie's Bicycle","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/#website"},"datePublished":"2020-02-11T12:33:58+00:00","dateModified":"2022-01-20T16:28:25+00:00","description":"With grade I and II listed arts and crafts buildings, Watts Gallery Artists Village, nestled into the Surrey Hills in an area of outstanding natural beauty, environmental awareness and responsibility, is deep rooted in the gallery\u2019s ethos. 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Not only thinking about waste, but how waste translates to secondary impacts, is a reflection in the behaviour changes within the gallery. Not only is waste recycled, they have sourced a recycling company that shares and is committed to their environmental outlook. Prioritising local sustainable materials Owing to the surrounding natural beauty, sustainable materials have been procured and used both internally and externally, ranging from clay roof tiles and Forestry Stewardship Council certified timber, to sheep wool thermal insulation and natural oil and water-based paints and varnishes. [caption id=\"attachment_3179\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"1024\"] Image: Watts Gallery \u2013 Artists\u2019 Village[\/caption] The grounds have made well for allotment produce and compostable serve ware are provided in the tea shop. Making small changes like replacing plastic with paper bags in their shop, in collaboration with Art Fund, has saved over 100,000 plastic bags so far. Weaving in environmentally friendly alternatives has shown small changes make huge differences. \u201cThe programme has supported Watts Gallery Trust thus far by providing us with key tools to develop best practice, particularly in reporting requirements. The one-to-one support received from Julie\u2019s Bicycle under Arts Council England\u2019s Environmental Programme contributed considerably to the development of the Trust\u2019s environmental policy and action plan which is now in place, as well as assisting in the reporting of site emissions.\u201d Watts Gallery Trust, Surrey Feeling Inspired? Find out about how your organisation could rise to the climate challenge through our Creative Green Certification Programme - which inspires and celebrates environmental best practice for events, venues, museums, galleries, festivals and offices across the creative sector. Find out more and apply now! 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