In Sussex, on the edge of Lewes by the River Ouse, are more than twenty acres of land, used for over fifty years as rail yards. When they were dismantled, they became a wasteland. After twenty-five years of benign neglect, the land was saved from development by a group of local residents. Since then, it has become a prized nature reserve around which several social and ecological projects gravitate. These, and the web of relations between them, constitute the Railway Land Project.
Special Nature Corridors and Priory School Open Day

Date: 03/05/2013
Special exhibition of work by the award winning Nature Corridors team and pupils from Priory School.
Linklater Pavilion. Sunday 26th May. 2 – 5pm.
All welcome. Free entry.
Read more
Linklater Pavilion. Sunday 26th May. 2 – 5pm.
All welcome. Free entry.
Read more


This website, part-financed by the European Union and the Railway Land Wildlife Trust, is managed by the Trust which co-ordinates the Railway Land Project on the ground in partnership with Lewes District Council.
