Crossness Nature Reserve - Photo Competition

Send us your snapshots of the marshes! 

We Want Your News!  A Living Newspaper for Bexley

We want to hear about the events affecting you and your local area

Analog film still showing a man sitting on a small bench, looking at a piece of paper on the bench. He is dressed in long trousers and striped T-shirt. He is sitting in a natural environment, there are trees and bushes behind him, grass on the ground. The still has a reddish filter applied, distorting natural colours and giving it an older feel.

Dolphin Close

Join us for a special outdoor screening of Dolphin Close, a new film by artist Ed Webb-Ingall and Friends of Tump 39

Analogue photo of a river shore at dusk. In the foreground, shallow water has receded to reveal wet sand, seaweed, and clusters of small dark ducks like black dots. The river runs bluish in fading light, with a small cargo train on the right. Across the water, cranes, warehouses, power lines, and mounds form an industrial shoreline, lit by white and pinkish lights that reflect on the river. The scene feels quiet, atmospheric, and softly grainy from the analogue film.

remnant horizons

​​A sound performance by felix taylor and Action Pyramid, for and with Crossness Nature Reserve

Wanderlust Hill 2025

Wanderlust Hill is back, and our incredible youth collective, The South East Way, is once again bringing the super sounds of young London to the Thamesmead Festival.

a small call for an ever

An exhibition of photographs by Sarah White, co-curated by Friends of Crossness Nature Reserve with support from Three Rivers

Join Our Newsroom And Get Paid To Collect The Stories That Matter Locally!

We’re looking for local people to help us research, report and write a new Living Newspaper for Bexley in collaboration with Post Workers Theatre.

The Open Road

 A journey reimagined through moving image

Dawn Chorus Broadcast

Listen in as ornithological investigator, J D Swann,  livestreams the wild sounds of Tump 39 on International Dawn Chorus Day!

Three Rivers is hosted by Peabody Trust, with support from Orbit and Red House National Trust, and funded by Arts Council England through their national Creative People and Places programme.