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Bowthorpe makes a notable contribution to local sport, providing grounds for Norwich's largest 5-a-side football complex. Bowthorpe also was the home of Sunday League team Wendene Wanderers, who folded towards the end of 2010 due to lack of finance. Wendene was mainly a youth club, with many teams ranging from Under-6s to Under-16s.
It became the Bowthorpe Road Public Assistance Institution in 1930 and, although the main building was destroyed by bombing during the Baedeker Blitz of the Second World War, the hospital joined the National Health Service as the West Norwich Hospital in 1948. [2] After a programme of investment it became the Norwich Community Hospital in 2005. [3]
Bowthorpe Ward, Norwich is one of 13 wards in Norwich, [1] each of which is represented by three City Councillors on Norwich City Council. [2] It takes its name from the suburban village of Bowthorpe .
A community centre which provides a warm space and aids those in food poverty is under threat of closure. ... which runs the hub, said the local community had rallied and raised half the money ...
Grapes Hill Community Garden is a small city centre garden close to the Norwich Inner Ring road. Created from a disused, tarmaced play area, it was officially opened in 2011. The garden is tended by volunteers and contains a large number of edible plants together with a wide choice of wild and woodland flowers, grasses, shrubs and trees.
The Orange Line consists of routes 21, 21A, 22 and 22A. The 21 and 21A start at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, and run east through Bowthorpe and West Earlham to Norwich city centre, before turning north and terminating in Old Catton at White Woman Lane. [5] An Orange Line bus in Norwich city centre, March 2018.
A charity trust has resubmitted plans for a community hub at a former horse riding centre. The Nene Park Trust wants to transform Lynch Farm - a Grade II listed farmhouse and outbuildings on the ...
Norwich City Women play their home matches at the Community Sports Foundation's The Nest [33] which is named after the former ground of Norwich City FC. The Nest is also a community hub and in 2024 Lioness Lauren Hemp, originally from North Walsham, opened a new 3G pitch at the site which is named after her. [34]