Projects

Real places interpreted through a conservation-led lens.

Projects and land opportunities help show how the HEADTURNED Foundation thinks in practical terms about stewardship, biodiversity, habitat recovery, and long-term ecological potential. Some represent active areas of focus, while others reflect early-stage site evaluation and conservation interpretation.

Why projects matter

They help make the Foundation’s thinking visible in real-world terms.

The Foundation’s wider ecosystem explains how its long-term model connects land, biodiversity, learning, animal welfare, innovation, and public value. Project pages help show how that thinking applies to real places.

In some cases, that means outlining active areas of work. In others, it means presenting land opportunities that are being explored carefully to understand their ecological potential and their suitability for long-term stewardship.

A wide natural landscape representing land stewardship, biodiversity, and conservation-led ecological potential
Land opportunity

Trowell woodlands and fields in ecological focus.

A 46-acre site currently for sale, explored through a conservation-led lens to understand its potential for biodiversity, habitat recovery, and long-term stewardship.

This is not an active Foundation project. It is an ecological interpretation of the land’s potential, informed by early-stage evaluation work including mapping, modelling, and habitat-focused assessment.

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Woodland acres

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Grassland acres

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Total acres

Land opportunities

Some sites are presented as early-stage ecological opportunities rather than committed delivery projects.

Not every site shown by the Foundation represents owned land or active implementation. Some reflect exploratory work, where the aim is to understand what may be possible through careful conservation-led evaluation.

This approach allows the Foundation to communicate ecological potential responsibly, without overstating ownership, approval, or certainty. It also reflects a more measured approach to stewardship, where observation and understanding come before intervention.

Opportunities

Real projects create real pathways into meaningful work.

The Foundation is being built to do more than deliver projects. It is structured to create opportunities across land restoration, animal care, food systems, innovation, media, and wider operations.

As projects develop, they open routes into practical involvement, applied learning, and cross-sector collaboration within a connected ecosystem designed for long-term participation.

Explore opportunities