Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
BIRDS, BEES, ROSES AND TREES ALL THRIVING AT THE HOME OF ROLLS-ROYCE
Thu Jul 02 10:00:00 CEST 2020 Press Release
While the Rolls-Royce Global Centre of Luxury Manufacturing Excellence stood largely silent between 24 March and 4 May, it was very much business as usual for the plants, animals, birds and insects that inhabit the 42-acre site.
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Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
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Author.
Andrew Ball
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
While the Rolls-Royce Global Centre of Luxury Manufacturing
Excellence stood largely silent between 24 March and 4 May, it was
very much business as usual for the plants, animals, birds and insects
that inhabit the 42-acre site.
Like many of the human inhabitants of the Home of Rolls-Royce,
the celebrated lime trees that grace the Courtyard entered the month
of June in urgent need of a haircut. (Contrary to popular belief,
these trees do not naturally grow square, although rumour has it that
finding a way to persuade them is being investigated by Rolls-Royce
Engineers). All 65 trees were meticulously trimmed, using laser-guided
precision cutting equipment to restore them to immaculate, uniform
perfection in honour of the return of Rolls-Royce clients.
The large central lake, which acts as a natural heat-sink for
the manufacturing plant’s climate-control systems, provides an
excellent habitat for wildfowl species including ducks, moorhens,
swans and herons.
Many of these birds produced young during the shutdown; but
enchanting as they are, ducklings and moorhen chicks are erratic and
ungainly on land and have very little traffic sense. To safeguard
these charming but highly vulnerable residents, Rolls-Royce has now
installed official highway-standard warning signs for drivers at key
wildfowl crossing points on the site’s network of roads, including The
Drive that leads to the main entrance.
Production at the Goodwood Apiary also continued uninterrupted
throughout the pandemic. The 250,000-strong colony of English honey
bees, whose activities now attract a worldwide following on social
media, is working round-the-clock preparing this season’s consignment
of their rare and precious product, the ‘Rolls-Royce of Honey’. As
well as the multitude of wildflowers growing across the site, and
those on the surrounding Goodwood Estate, the bees have access to over
32,000 square metres (around eight acres) of sedum on the
manufacturing plant’s living roof, the largest of its kind in Britain.
Fittingly, the flowers pollinated by the Goodwood bees in the
course of their labours include one that grows nowhere else in the
world. Produced exclusively for Rolls-Royce by the award-winning
British rose breeder Philip Harkness, the Phantom Rose flourishes in a
lavender-fringed flowerbed near the reflection ponds beside the
manufacturing plant. A blousy, creamy-white flower with a full bloom
of 50 petals and a rich perfume, the Rose recently inspired an
intricately embroidered Bespoke interior, featuring over a million
individual stiches, handcrafted for a Swedish client’s Phantom.
Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce Motor
Cars, said, “One of the most striking outcomes from the Covid-19
lockdown has been the huge surge in people’s awareness and
appreciation of the natural world. Many of us have found ourselves
more in tune than ever before with the wildlife that lives alongside
us. That’s certainly true here at the Home of Rolls‑Royce – we’ve come
back to work determined to ensure our ‘new normal’ is even more
focused on our relationship with nature.”
He added, “We strive to minimise our environmental impact – our
manufacturing plant has won numerous sustainability awards and we’ve
been accredited to ISO 14001 for environmental management and
pollution prevention since we opened in 2003. These are big, important
achievements but getting closer to nature during lockdown has reminded
us that the smallest details and actions also make an enormous
difference – which is exactly how we approach building the best car in
the world.”
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