• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Broadland Housing Association

Broadland Housing Association

Homes, community & support since 1963

  • Show Search Search
    • Welcome
    • About Broadland
      • About us
      • Board and leadership
      • Values
      • Our Publications
        • Door to Door Magazine
        • Housing Matters
        • A-Z Policies & Procedures
      • Become a member
      • Governance documents
      • Sustainability
      • Informative Videos
      • Tender and procurement
      • AGM
    • Careers
    • Manage your home
      • Your home
        • Report a repair
        • Safety in your home
        • Damp and mould
        • Alterations to your home
        • Home maintenance tips
        • Home contents insurance
        • Energy saving
      • Your neighbourhood
        • Local Delivery Teams & Neighbourhood Officers
        • Anti-social Behaviour
        • Waste
        • Estate Services
        • Cleaning standards
      • Your payments
        • Pay your rent
        • Tenants Online – How to
        • Help and support
        • Service Charges
        • Universal Credit
      • Your tenancy
        • End your tenancy
        • Tenancy Fraud
        • Types of Tenancies
        • Pets
      • Help and Support
        • Tenant Support
        • Adult safeguarding
        • A-Z Policies & Procedures
        • Information leaflets
    • Support
      • Apply for Tenancy Support
      • Welfare Benefits
      • Domestic Abuse
      • Health & Wellbeing
      • Managing Money
      • Energy Saving
    • Get involved
      • Become a member
      • Tenant Assurance Panel (TAP)
      • Housing for Over 55s Panel (HOP)
      • Digital Panel
      • Community Inspector
      • Mystery Shopper
      • Community Conversation
      • TPAS (Tenant Participation Advisory Service)
      • Tenant Perception Survey
      • Residents Voice
    • Our Homes
      • Find a home
      • Developing New Homes
      • Broadland St Benedicts
    • Contact us
      • Reasonable Adjustments
      • Update contact details
      • Local Delivery Teams & Neighbourhood Officers
      • Download leaflets
    • Accessibility
    • Show Search
    Hide Search

    News

    Celebration at Canary Quay honours social housing champions

    October 11, 2021

    Broadland Housing has celebrated naming apartment blocks at Canary Quay, Norwich, after Baroness Patricia Hollis and Richard Hawthorn, both passionate supporters of social housing.

    • Naming ceremony, Patricia Hollis House and Richard Hawthorn House, Canary Quay, Norwich
    • Naming ceremony for Patricia Hollis House and Richard Hawthorne House, Canary Quay, Norwich
    • Tenants at Canary Quay, naming ceremony for Patricia Hollis House and Richard Hawthorn House, Norwich
    • Naming ceremony for Patricia Hollis House and Richard Hawthorne House, Canary Quay, Norwich
    • Naming ceremony for Patricia Hollis House and Richard Hawthorne House, Canary Quay, Norwich

    Speakers Lord Alan Howarth and MP Clive Lewis joined Canary Quay tenants at the naming ceremony, which was held on the site at Geoffrey Watling Way, Norwich. The development of over 300 new homes on the riverside is a partnership between Broadland Housing and R G Carter.

    ‘Somewhere to call home’

    Baroness Hollis, who died in 2018, was chair of Broadland Housing Association from 2009 until 2015, at the time when the vision for Canary Quay was created.  Richard Hawthorn was a tenant Board member of the housing association from 2010 until his death in 2017.

    Welcoming guests to the celebration, Broadland Housing Association Chief Executive Michael Newey said the occasion was bittersweet. 

    Patricia and Richard were amazing as Board members. They both played a significant part in making this development reality.  It’s fitting that their names adorn the first two blocks which have been completed here, because above all both of them felt it was very important that people have somewhere to call home.

    Michael Newey, Chief Executive, Broadland Housing Associatoin

    Lord Howarth (pictured above, centre), who was Baroness Hollis’ partner, said:

    Patricia was not about public recognition, but she would have been very proud to have her name associated with a social housing project in Norwich.  She would have been thrilled at the fulfilment of this project.

    She was very happy to be invited to chair Broadland Housing Association. She loved working with them, and was very proud of what they achieved.

    Patricia was also very fond of Richard Hawthorn, a fellow trustee and a great advocate for the interests of Broadland’s tenants.

    Lord Alan Howarth

    ‘Community is all about people’

    Norwich South MP Clive Lewis said that the new development was a community space which would enable the community to flourish.

    Ultimately community is about people. It’s about buildings, it’s about infrastructure, it’s about talking, and Patricia was very good at all of those things. She was a community builder.

    When people look at the name Patricia Hollis on this building in years to come, all they need to know is that she helped to build that building, and that she helped to build a community not just here, but across the city, and in many people’s hearts.

    Clive Lewis MP (Norwich South)

    Richard Hawthorn’s son Marcus sent a message from Canada which was read out at the ceremony. 

    My father could not have wished for a greater accolade than to have his name associated with a cause that is supporting people, and that it should be so close to Carrow Road and his beloved Canaries.

    Marcus Hawthorn
    Read biographies of Baroness Patricia Hollis and Richard HawthornDownload

    Canary Quay has been built on land formerly owned by Norwich City Football Club.  The development is a mixture of social housing, affordable homes and open market properties.

    AGM 2021 – Broadland Housing focused on ‘enduring purpose’ of providing good quality, affordable homes

    September 30, 2021

    AGM 2021 – Broadland Housing focused on ‘enduring purpose’ of providing good quality, affordable homes

    Broadland Housing held its Annual General Meeting in September. Michael Newey, Chief Executive (pictured), said that the key challenges in 2020-21 had been to keep people safe, keep homes decent and meet tenants’ expectations. He described how Broadland had ‘gone the extra mile’ to meet these challenges.

    Michael Newey, Chief Executive of Broadland Housing Association, addresses the 2021 AGM

    Providing new homes

    Despite the pandemic, during 2020-21 Broadland Housing delivered:

    • a total of 147 new homes (against a target of 72), of which
    • 92 were affordable rent
    • 33 were for shared ownership

    During the year Broadland also allocated:

    • a total of 348 homes, of which
    • 117 were to homeless households
    • 111 to older people.

    Keeping tenants safe

    The pandemic has been the most significant event of my life, and the same is true for most of us. Life has changed, and we have all faced significant challenges.  I am really proud of how we transitioned almost overnight to meet those challenges and continue to meet our objectives.

    Our ambitions remain the same, but the world has changed. We have had to adapt the way we do things.  Our number one priority has been keeping people safe, and that has sometimes meant that we haven’t been able to do everything that we wanted to do. 

    Supporting people has never been more important, whether through befriending calls with people who have been isolated in their homes, or dealing with urgent issues such as emergency repairs.”

    Michael Newey, Chief Executive

    Working towards net carbon zero

    As Broadland emerges from the pandemic, it faces the continuing challenges of responding to climate change and tackling homelessness, and a renewed focus on local delivery all priorities, along with continuing to provide more new homes.

    Climate change will in the long term be a bigger issue than Covid. The issue is how we can deliver the 2050 net carbon zero target without pushing people into fuel poverty? One piece of research has estimated that meeting that target will cost an average of nearly £21,000 per affordable home, so the financial impact is enormous.

    Tackling homelessness has been a long-term priority for us.  The pandemic inspired a renewed sense of joined-up thinking and partnership working, and we have played a role in both the Norfolk Strategic Housing Partnership and the Norfolk Homelessness Forum.  We have also worked with King’s Lynn, Norwich and Great Yarmouth to provide ‘housing first’ accommodation, move-on accommodation and homes for prison leavers.

    Michael Newey, Chief Executive

    First hybrid AGM

    Thanking tenants, staff and stakeholders for their support over the year, Michael Newey said:

    There is no doubt that the pandemic will continue to have a substantial impact on our operations during the coming year. However, our commitment to delivering our enduring purpose, namely helping people who cannot afford decent places to live in the open market access good quality affordable homes, remains as strong as ever.

    The AGM was Broadland’s first hybrid meeting. To observe Covid-19 safety guidance, a limited number of people attended in person, while the remainder joined virtually.

    Download a copy of the 2020-21 Annual Report.

    Edgefield residents share feedback on their new homes with architects and designers

    September 29, 2021

    We recently invited residents at our Edgefield development to meet the architects and designers who created their new homes. It was an opportunity for them to give feedback to improve future developments.

    The mixed-tenure scheme at Edgefield, Norfolk, is on the north side of the village. It contains 12 affordable homes and 10 open-market homes.

    Resident feedback will shape future developments

    At the evening event, residents enjoyed pizza on the open green space which forms part of the Edgefield scheme. They talked directly to the architects, designers, specifiers and project managers who were responsible for their new homes. The residents’ valuable insight will feed into future Broadland projects.

    We weren’t able to hold a traditional launch event for this site due to the Covid pandemic. So a few months on, we decided instead to take advantage of the fact that people have been living in their new homes for a while to gain some feedback about how the on-paper designs have translated into their real-life experience.

    It was a hugely useful exercise, as well as bringing the new community together socially.  This kind of mixed-tenure scheme is increasingly how we are able to deliver affordable homes, especially in rural locations such as north Norfolk

    Executive Development Director Andrew Savage (pictured centre)

    Mixed-tenure scheme

    Nine of the new homes at Edgefield are affordable rent properties for local people. A further 3 are shared-ownership homes.  The remaining 10 homes were sold on the open market to help fund Broadland’s programme of building social housing in the Norfolk and north Suffolk

    Talk reveals the fascinating history of The Orchards, Aylsham

    September 27, 2021

    Talk reveals the fascinating history of The Orchards, Aylsham

    • External view of Broadland Housing Association property:The Orchards, Aylsham, Norfolk
    • Maggie Vaughan and Dr Roger Polhill of the Aylsham Town Archive

    Broadland Housing tenants at The Orchards on Norwich Road learned the fascinating history of their home at an exclusive event at Aylsham Town Hall recently.

    After the illustrated talk by the Aylsham Town Archive, tenants enjoyed a cream tea.

    Archivists and historians Dr Roger Polhill and Maggie Vaughan-Lewis (pictured above) had trawled local archives at the town hall and Aylsham Heritage Centre for the story of the mock Tudor building. The Orchards was built in 1848 by William Repton, principal solicitor in the town, and son of the renowned landscape designer Humphry Repton.

    “It has soul as well as history…”

    Tenant Paul Gibson, who moved to The Orchards in July, said:

    What a fantastic insight into our home. It’s so interesting to hear its history, I will look on it with a new eye now.

    The Orchards is a wonderful place to live. It has got all sorts of nooks and crannies. It has soul as well as history, as well as spectacular gardens.  I keep waiting for some Victorian ghost to come wafting up!

    Mary, another tenant, who has lived at The Orchards for a year, echoed Paul’s thoughts:

    I have lived in Aylsham for 8 years, and always used to walk past The Orchards. I didn’t know any of the history, but I always thought it would be my dream home.

    It’s like living in Blickling Hall, with its baronial entrance hall.  It’s everything I dreamed of an more – it’s my miracle flat!

    Thanking Dr Polhill and Mrs Vaughan-Lewis for their presentation, Paula Strachan, Communication and Tenant Participation Manager, said:

    Many residents at the Orchards know snippets about the history of the building, but it has been really interesting to hear a well-researched and authentic history from its construction right to the present day.

    The story of The Orchards

    (information provided by Dr Roger Polhill and Maggie Vaughan-Lewis of Aylsham Town Archive)

    The Orchards was built by William Repton in 1848 for his illegitimate daughter Eleanor (later Helen) Panton, who had married his partner in the law business William Scott in 1840.  Repton, who lived on the Market Place, had bought two acres of a former nursery in 1828 and used it as an orchard (hence the name of the house).

    It was designed by William’s elder brother John Adey Repton, an associate of famous architect George Gilbert Scott, in neo-Tudor style.  William Repton commissioned builder and carpenter Robert Bartram, based in Millgate, to build the house, insisting that work continued in three eight-hour shifts, 24 hours a day.

    On William Repton’s death in 1858, William Scott was the main beneficiary, and ten years later they moved into the Old Bank House and sold The Orchards.  The 1868 sale catalogue describes a 23’x16’ dining room, two drawing rooms, a breakfast room, smoking room and gun room, as well as nine bedrooms and three upper storey drawing rooms, and extensive grounds.

    Below stairs were domestic offices, a butler’s pantry, store room, glass closet, kitchens and wine and ale cellars, and there were four attic bedrooms for domestics.

    The property was bought by the Wright family, who let the house to a succession of tenants, including Justice of the Peace and brewer Charles Morse, who entertained the Duke of Connaught – third son of Queen Victoria – to lunch in the house.

    In 1927 The Orchards was bought by World War One hero Captain James Sears, remembered for the Ian Sears Clinic he built at the bottom of the garden, which was a Child Welfare Centre.  Sears subsequently became involved in Labour politics, and eventually sold the house to the Aylsham and District Labour Party to be used as a hostel.

    It was later bought by John Baden (J.B.) Postle, who converted it into a number of flats.  His daughter Ann inherited the house in 1963, but by 1990 it was falling into disrepair, and when it was listed in 1995, Broadland District Council advised her that it would take £50,000 to bring it up to Grade II listed standard.  It was put up for sale in 1997, but by 2001 it was reported as being derelict with evidence of squatters, and in June that year a fire damaged the property.

    Broadland Housing Association took on the property in 2002, converting the main house into 8 flats, and building a sympathetically-designed new building also containing 8 flats.

    Canary Quay in final phase of construction

    September 23, 2021

    Canary Quay in final phase of construction

    With our partners R G Carter we are delighted to have reached the 4th phase of Canary Quay, a new modern housing development on the River Wensum in Norwich city centre.

    Building of 101 x1- and 2-bedroom apartments has already started on site. This represents the final stage of the Canary Quay regeneration project. More than 300 affordable and privately-owned homes are being created, offering modern living space in a desirable riverside location. As well as RG Carter, Broadland worked with a range of partners, including Norwich City Council, Ingleton Wood, Rossi Long, Bidwells, Savills and Borne to realise the project.

    Michael Newey, Group Chief Executive, said:

    One of our priorities is to provide much needed affordable homes for the people living in the city. This development is part of the solution.

    Andrew Savage, Executive Development Director, added:

    We are delighted to progress to phase 4 of this important development.  Our strong partnership with Carters showcases what can be achieved together.

    Transformative project

    The final phase is expected to be completed in 2022 and will sit alongside 222 apartments completed in phases 1, 2 and 3 of the scheme’s construction. The blocks are officially named Patricia Hollis House, Richard Hawthorn House, Solace, Olive, Norada and White Moth.

    Mario Rackham, Director and General Manager at R G Carter, said:

    We’re incredibly proud of this development and our continuing partnership with Broadland Housing. It’s great to see the Canary Quay regeneration finally coming together transforming the riverside area, while providing high-quality modern housing for the local community.

    The spacious apartments will offer open plan living spaces, contemporary kitchens and bathrooms, a communal garden, riverside views and access to a new riverside walk that leads to the city centre. The new apartments will be marketed from autumn 2022 and available for residents to move in from spring 2023.

    Watch a drone video of the completed apartments. 

    • « Go to Previous Page
    • Page 1
    • Interim pages omitted …
    • Page 13
    • Page 14
    • Page 15
    • Page 16
    • Page 17
    • Interim pages omitted …
    • Page 40
    • Go to Next Page »

    Primary Sidebar

    Latest News

    Work Begins on 7 New Affordable Homes in Swanton Novers

    Innovative new homes at Tower Place

    two men on roof pouring beer

    Fantastic Progress on New Homes in Salthouse

    Planning submitted for The Conge, Great Yarmouth

    Residents Move into New Affordable Homes in Hindringham

    Independent East Board and Resident Conference

    Carbon Zero Affordable Homes Completed in Hindringham

    Completion of Gypsy and Traveller Accommodation Project

    Affordable Homes Project Begins in West Beckham

    Gardening Competition 2024 Results

    Footer

    Social

    See what we're up to by following along on social media.

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • TikTok
    • Twitter
    • YouTube

    Contact us

    Send us an email

    Broadland Housing Association,
    NCFC, Carrow Road,
    Norwich.
    NR1 1HU

    Call us

    Mon,Wed,Thurs: 8am-5pm / Tues,Fri: 9am-5pm tel: 0303 303 0003
    Out of hours emergencies: 0303 303 0003
    Find your Neighbourhood contact
    Media enquiries only: Paula Strachan 07880 196830
    Please note, all calls are recorded for training and monitoring purposes.

    Copyright © 2025 · Site created by Business Equip · Log in

    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookies
    Font Resize
    Contrast
    Accessibility by WAH
    • About the project
    • About us
      • Accreditations
      • AGM
      • Board and leadership
        • Board members
          • Judith Elliott
          • Maria Campos Torres
        • Broadland Development Services
        • Broadland Meridian
          • Stuart Everett
        • Broadland St Benedicts board
        • Directors
        • Gavin Tempest
        • Iain Grieve
        • James Godfrey
        • Jenny Watson
        • Joanna Ballman
        • Judith Elliot
        • Louise Archer
        • Michael Finister-Smith
        • Michael Newey
        • Michael Newey
        • Moreen Pascal
        • Richard Alexander
        • Steve Dickinson
      • Broadland Development Services
      • Cookies
      • Creative Matters – living with homelessness
      • Governance documents
        • AGM summaries
        • Annual Review
        • Corporate Strategy
        • Data protection and GDPR
        • Financial statements
        • Minutes
        • Value for money
      • Homes for Cathy
        • East Anglia Regional Meeting October 2019
        • Homes for prison leavers – 17 November 2020
        • Housing First – 4 March 2021
        • Housing First seminar – 4 September 2020
        • Migrant homelessness
        • Reframing Homelessness – 20 October 2020
        • Tenancy Sustainment – 29 January 2021
      • Informative Videos
      • Our Publications
        • A-Z Policies & Procedures
        • Housing Matters
        • Join our mailing list
        • Read online
        • Read previous issues
        • Send us your feedback
      • Our values
        • Against domestic abuse
        • Digital by Default
        • Gypsy and Traveller Housing
        • Harry’s Pledge
        • History
        • Independent East
        • Mental Health Champions
        • Placeshapers
        • Tpas
      • Performance
      • Sustainability
        • Award-winning environmental upgrade
        • Environmental Champions
          • Greener travel
        • Performance
        • Strategy and policy
        • Switchee smart thermostat
      • Tender and procurement
        • Modern slavery statement
    • Admin
    • Board minutes
    • Broadland Admin
    • Brooks Green Gypsy and Traveller site, Norwich
    • Careers
      • Apprenticeships
      • Join our team
      • Why work for us?
    • Christmas fire safety
    • Consultation Demo
      • Leave Feedback
      • Site Plan
    • Contact us
      • Download leaflets
      • Make a complaint
        • Complaint Handling Code
        • Compliance with the Complaint Handling Code
        • Our Complaints Policy
      • Reasonable Adjustments
        • Complaints Charter for Housing
      • Report a concern about domestic abuse or adult safeguarding
      • Update contact details
    • Cookie Policy
    • David Richardson
    • Decent Home Standard
    • Documentary: World Homelessness Day 2024
    • East Anglian Regional meeting April 2023
    • East Anglian Regional meeting November 2023
    • Easter Event
    • Eastern Region Seminar 28 March 2025
    • Environmental, Social & Governance Report
    • Featured News
    • Get involved!
      • Become a member
      • Community Conversations
      • Community Inspectors
      • Digital Panel
      • Door to Door Magazine
      • Gardening Competition 2025
      • Good Neighbour Award
      • Housing for Over 55s Panel (HOP)
      • Mystery Shopper
      • Previous Issues
      • Residents Association
      • Sign up to be a member
        • Members Events- Looking forward – 16 March 2023
        • Members Seminar – Decarbonisation
      • Tenant Assurance Panel (TAP)
    • Hein van den Wildenberg
    • Helen Skoyles
    • Home page copy
    • Jackie Crisp
    • Justin Plumpton
    • Manage your home
      • FREE Premier League Kicks sessions
      • Help and Support
      • Pay your rent
      • Pinboard
        • Submit to Pinboard
      • Saving with Norwich Credit Union
      • Sorrel & Campion House: replacement of hot and cold water pipes
      • Support organisations
      • Tell us about your rent issue
      • Tenant Perception Survey
      • Warm home discount scheme
      • Your home
        • Adult safeguarding
        • Aids & adaptations
        • Carbon monoxide
        • Cleaning
        • Cleaning standards
        • Contents insurance
        • Damp and mould
        • Electrical fires
        • Hard water tips
        • Health and safety
          • Health and Safety Policy Manual
        • Icy weather
        • Illegal dumping
        • Making alterations to your Broadland property
        • Neighbourhood Management Policy & Procedure
        • Report a repair
          • Damage to your home
          • How we prioritise repairs
          • Planned maintenance works
          • Priority repairs 2022
          • Repairs – FAQs
        • Right to acquire
        • Safety in your home
          • Fire Safety
            • Tumble dryer fires
          • Fire safety leaflets
        • Electrical safety
        • Gas safety
      • Your payments
        • Service Charges
        • Universal Credit
          • Preparing for Universal Credit: tips from our tenants!
          • Reporting your housing costs on Universal Credit
          • Universal Credit – online journal
          • Universal Credit – your questions
          • Universal Credit and your rent
        • Tenants Online – How to
      • Your tenancy
        • End your tenancy
        • Pets
        • Tenancy Fraud
        • Types of Tenancies
    • Member events 2024
    • News
    • NSHP Contact Page
    • NSHP Get Involved
    • Our Homes
      • Developing New Homes
        • ‘Amador’ house design & floor plans
        • ‘Ballard’ house design & floor plans
        • ‘Knights’ house design & floor plans
        • ‘Mumford’ house design & floor plans
        • Back Lane, Roughton
        • Brisley, Norfolk – housing needs survey
        • Broadgate Close, Northrepps
        • Broadland Development Services
        • Broadland St Benedicts
        • Church Road – building specifications
        • Church Road – consultation questionnaire
        • Church Road – design development
        • Church Road – site & context
        • Church Road – site models
        • Colby & Banningham
        • Community Consultation & Planning
          • Blakeney
        • Completed Schemes
        • Currently in Construction
        • Driving sustainable development in Norfolk
        • Jubilee Court, Great Yarmouth
        • Kemble house design
        • Longham, Norfolk – housing needs survey
        • Norwich Road, Corpusty
        • Sheringham Road – building specifications
        • Sheringham Road – consultation questionnaire
        • Sheringham Road – design development
        • Sheringham Road – site & context
        • Sheringham Road – site models
        • Tackling Homelessness in Our Region
        • West Beckham – Church Road & Sheringham Road
      • Find a home
        • Gypsy Roma & Traveller sites
        • Homes for sale
          • Looking after your new home
        • Housing with care
          • Benjamin Court, Cromer
          • Dell Rose Court, Norwich
          • Harriet Court, Norwich
          • Lisbon Court, King’s Lynn
          • Lloyd Court, Kelling
          • Oakes Court, Downham Market
          • The Lawns, Great Yarmouth
        • Mutual exchange
        • New apartments to rent at Canary Quay!
        • Shared ownership
          • Existing shared owners – Important documents
          • Information for existing shared owners
          • Looking after your new shared ownership home
          • Policies
          • What is shared ownership?
        • Sheltered housing
          • Oulton Court, Oulton Broad, Suffolk
          • Samford Court, Worlingham, Beccles, Suffolk
          • St Katherine’s Court, King’s Lynn, Norfolk
          • The Cedars, Norwich
          • Woodcote, near Norwich, Norfolk
          • York Place, Dereham, Norfolk
      • Rent a home
        • Homes to rent
        • Housing with care open days
    • Patricia Hollis House – Your home
    • Plumbers – Sorrel & Campion House upgrade
    • Previous phases
    • Properties for sale – existing homes
    • Repairs & Improvement Workshop
    • Residents Voice
    • Robert Kett Court, Wymondham
    • Rules & Standing Orders
    • Search
    • Search Results
    • Tenant Support
      • Apply for Tenancy Support
      • Domestic Abuse
      • Energy saving
        • Gas and electricity bills
        • Priority service registers
        • Switching energy suppliers
      • Energy saving tips
      • Health and wellbeing
      • Job searching
      • Looking after your home
      • Norfolk Directory
      • TILS+ (tenancy and independent living skills training)
      • Your health & wellbeing
        • Exercise
        • Health and wellbeing news
        • Information and tips on mental health
        • Real-life tenant stories
      • Your money
        • Credit unions
        • Loan sharks
      • Welfare Benefits
      • Foodbanks
    • Test Welcome
    • The Lathes Refurbishment
    • Training Page
    • Ukraine – what we can do to help
    • Waste and recycling: important information for Shipfield tenants
    • Welcome
    • Your neighbourhood
      • Estate Services
      • Local Delivery Teams & Neighbourhood Officers
      • Waste
      • Anti-social Behaviour
        • Support for Victims of Antisocial Behaviour
    • Networking Event at Barnham Broom – 9th October
    • Norfolk Homelessness Prevention Strategy 2022-2025
    • NSHP News & Events