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Fulham Reach Boat Club

"The health of our space, that's the place for our health"

Fulham Reach Boat Club is a charity – and a Sport for Good Centre of Excellence – that uses rowing to tackle social inequalities while caring for the Thames environment.

Their approach proves that environmental action and community development go hand in hand.

The charity's mission is simple: transform lives by making rowing accessible and inclusive for everyone, especially people from underserved backgrounds.

Their motto captures their philosophy perfectly: "The health of our space, that's the place for our health."

Fulham Reach Boat Club

Why have they taken action?

As a rowing club based on the Thames, environmental stewardship was a clear responsibility. Rowing is inseparable from the natural environment, and the charity feels a duty to act where the sport intersects with climate and environmental challenges. 

They identified an injustice: there was poor access to nature in their local area, with some residents not even aware the river – and opportunities to enjoy it – existed nearby.

This unequal access reflects wider environmental and social inequalities, presenting both a challenge and an opportunity – to engage the local community with their environment while supporting health and wellbeing.

Three people in a rowing boat head towards a bridge on the River Thames.

How have they done it?

  • Environmental stewardship

    The charity is committed to being positive environmental role models through practical action: 

    River clean-ups

    The charity organises regular river clean-ups for the local community and as a corporate volunteering activity.

    They have found it to have multiple benefits: as an accessible entry point to engage new people with the river, and an important task since the charity is located at a bench and bend on the river where rubbish naturally accumulates.

    So far, 327 people have participated, collecting 1,416kg of waste. 

    Water quality monitoring

    The charity conducts regular water-quality testing and shares data through a live, open-access tool. The data serves as both a reminder of climate change impacts and protection for participants' health, identifying when the water is unsafe for rowing activity. 

    Electric boat adoption

    The charity switched to an electric coaching boat in January 2024, and has since installed an electric charging point on its pontoon, which it makes available to 30 other rowing clubs within 6km to reduce range anxiety. 

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  • Reaching under-served communities

    The charity provides rowing opportunities for people from under-served backgrounds through three key programmes: 

    Youth development

    Working to improve the physical and mental wellbeing of young people, via a pathway of state school rowing, free watersport weeks and junior courses, and a junior squad with bursary places. 

    Crime reduction via Boats Not Bars programme

    Starting in 2019, the aim is to reduce reoffending rates through providing structured opportunities in prisons through rowing. So far, they have worked with 150 people in prison and 20 people have now been supported after release. 

    Accessible rowing

    Launched in 2025, the programme ensures rowing is accessible and adapted to people with disabilities, with the aim to 'coach the person in front of you, not the sport'. 

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  • Intersecting the social and environmental action

    The charity deliberately weaves environmental awareness into all community programmes:

    • River clean-ups serve as welcoming first experiences for nervous newcomers
    • Environmental education – on water quality, pollution impacts and climate change – happens alongside rowing coaching
    • Environmental issues are amplified in public spaces, with a seal sculpture made from rubbish from the river hung up in the boat house, and environmental stewardship tips showcased on the noticeboard
    • Participants are supported to become environmental advocates through hands-on experience. 

    "Engaging with the environment is often an easier sell than taking up a sport," the team explains.

    "Once engaged, confidence grows and people start to engage in the sport and get healthier from it." 

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  • Funding opportunities

    The charity uses a blended funding approach, including: 

    • Council grants and Port Authority support
    • Two full-time fundraisers focused on their three charitable pillars
    • Youth development programme subsidised through adult subscriptions, independent school partnerships and crowdfunding
    • Volunteer support for practical activities like clean-ups. 
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Three people wearing high-vis vests pick litter from the banks of the River Thames.

Outcomes

Key achievements include:

  • 327 people participated and 1,416kg of waste collected in river clean-ups
  • 30 rowing clubs in 6km have access to the new electric charger on the pontoon
  • Regular water-quality data shared publicly to raise environmental awareness
  • 150 people engaged through prison programmes, with 20 supported post-release
  • 1,000 young people engaged from 15 schools
  • Community Sport Club of the Year 2024
  • World Rowing Programme of the Year 2024

Top tips

Just get started

Start, recognise your obstacles, and move through them. Don't wait for perfect conditions – begin with what you can do today.

Make environmental action integral

Interweave environmental action into everything you do. It should be ever-present and then people will start to understand that action isn't difficult but just part of the process. 

Think beyond your sport

Using the environment as a gateway to engage a larger community is often an easier sell than taking up a sport.

Environmental stewardship and social action can attract people who might never have considered your sport, but once engaged, they often stay and benefit from both the activity and the community. 

Find out more

Fulham Reach Boat Club

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