Chris Baines

John Christopher Baines
Born (1947-05-04) 4 May 1947
Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Known for Environmentalist author, broadcaster, environmental campaigner

Chris Baines is an English naturalist, one of the UK's leading independent environmentalists.[1] He is a horticulturalist, landscape architect, naturalist, television presenter and author.[1]

Baines grew up in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. He worked in the local parks department when he left school, and then studied horticulture and landscape architecture at university.

Career

After an early career in landscape contracting, including several years of greening desert landscapes in the Middle East and community landscaping on UK inner-city housing estates, Baines taught landscape architecture at post-graduate level until 1986, when he was awarded an honorary personal professorship at Birmingham Polytechnic in Birmingham.

In 1980, he was one of a group of local environmentalists who co-founded the Urban Wildlife Group (now the Wildlife Trust for Birmingham and the Black Country), the first of a series of such urban conservation organisations to appear in the UK that year. This was the beginning of a burgeoning urban wildlife movement with which he has always had a close association, and he remains Vice-President of the Wildlife Trust for Birmingham and the Black Country.

Through most of the late 1980s and early 1990s, Baines focused on television broadcasting, and presented The Big E, Saturday Starship, Pebble Mill at One and several other networked series. The BBC TV programme Countryfile evolved from his original regional series "Your Country Needs You" and Baines was one of Countryfile 's early presenters.

Baines built the first wildlife garden ever allowed at Chelsea Flower Show in 1985, and in the same year his television programme Bluetits and Bumblebees, and his book, How to Make a Wildlife Garden, inspired many people to begin gardening with wildlife.[1]

The Wild Side of Town, which accompanied a five-part television series of the same name, won the U.K. Conservation Book Prize in 1987. His other books include four-story books for young children. His investigative environmental series for children, The Ark, won the International Wildscreen Award in 1987. Also in 1987, Chris recorded an album, The Wild Side of Town, with the folk-rock Albion Band and then toured the U.K., raising money for the British Wildlife Appeal.[1]

In 2000, he presented Charlie's Wildlife Gardens with Charlie Dimmock.[1]

Baines is one of the U.K.'s leading environmental campaigners, and in recent years he has particularly championed the cause of trees. He led the fight to prevent cable television and other utility companies chopping through the roots of urban street trees. He has also promoted the concept of urban forestry in the U.K. He was a founding member of the steering committee of CABE Space, the U.K. Government's urban greenspace adviser and continues to be a member of CABE's design review panel and SHAPE East.[1]

He was principal adviser to Trees of Time and Place, a campaign for the millennium which encouraged people to gather seeds from a favourite tree, grow a seedling and plant it for the future.[1] He also founded International Dawn Chorus Day in 1987. He was also a member of the steering board for the BBC's Breathing Places campaign.

Baines is committed to urban wildlife and wildlife gardening. He works from home in Wolverhampton, is a national vice-president of the Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts.[2] He is a former trustee of the Heritage Lottery Fund and has recently completed a further five years as a member of the HLF Expert Panel.[2] He is President of the Association for Environment Conscious Building, the Thames Estuary Partnership and the Essex Wildlife Trust.[2] In 2004 he was presented with the RSPB's annual Medal of Honour for his contribution to nature conservation[2] and sustainable water management. In 2013 he will be presented with the coveted Peter Scott Award by the British Naturalists Association.

Baines now works as a self-employed freelancer, and advises government ministers, local councils and senior executives in major water, minerals, finance, construction and housing companies, on environmental practice.[2]

He is particularly active as a professional environmental adviser to the house-building and development industry in the UK. He chaired the independent design review panel for the largest new housing development in the Thames Gateway, East of London at Barking Riverside and he also advised on sustainability at the 2012 Olympic Athletes' Village and Westfield Shopping City in Stratford, East London. He advises on regeneration in the UN World Heritage city of Bath, Somerset, and in the new township of the Hamptons, Peterborough, and is retained by developers Lend Lease to advise on green infrastructure for the redevelopment of the Heygate Estate, Elephant and Castle. He has a particular interest in the environment of retirement housing and is retained by specialist developer Beechcroft. He also advises the UK government's Department for Communities and Local Government (CLG) on biodiversity aspects of their proposed ecotowns. In 2010 he worked in the Gulf state of Qatar with the Boston Consulting Group, producing the twenty year forward strategy for that country's urban environments.

He has particular expertise in the field of sustainable water management. He has worked for a number of UK water companies, is an adviser to the water regulator OFWAT and has worked with the Environment Agency to improve communication of whole river catchment management.

Baines writes frequently in BBC Gardeners' World, BBC Wildlife and Country Living magazines.[2] He also writes regularly for Dales Life.[3] and is a regular broadcaster on BBC Radio 4.

Television programmes

Bibliography

(incomplete)

Children's books

Awards

References

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