
Please note you will need to buy a relevant ticket from the machines available at each tram stop (or have a valid travel card) before you board. Trams: - the nearest tram stop to Loxley House is Nottingham Station.There are many buses that connect the city centre to Nottingham railway station (the closest bus stop to Loxley House). Buses: Nottingham City Transport and Trent Barton.Please see our Want to volunteer page for more details of how you can search online for volunteering opportunities, visit a Volunteer Local session, or contact an advisor. We also offer in-person Volunteer Local drop-in services on a weekly basis in Bulwell and in St Ann's. Our Volunteer Centre services are operating online and remotely. An answerphone is available for out of hours messages to be left. The best time to make contact for general telephone enquiries is Monday to Thursday from 9am to 4pm. We also issue regular e-bulletins with important updates for the voluntary and community sector. If you wish to arrange to meet a member of staff, you can continue to contact us on 01, by email to directly to named staff), or through our social media channels. A few NCVS staff are based primarily in the office, while most of the team continue to deliver our services remotely and in the community. However, we are not able to offer a drop-in service like we did previously at Mansfield Road.Īt the beginning of the Coronavirus pandemic, we moved all of our scheduled events online, where appropriate, and our events remain online for now. It will be easier for us to have visitors at Loxley House. It has great transport links, is fully accessible and has space for us to hold in-person meetings and events in future. Loxley House is located to the south of Nottingham city centre, opposite Nottingham railway station. We have hired desk space on the 4th floor of Loxley House as a voluntary sector tenant. Our new office base is at Loxley House, Station Street, Nottingham NG2 3NG. NCVS has a new address (from September 2022). Our mission is to support VCSE organisations and groups to grow their capacity and capability, to increase the scale, scope and impact of volunteering and to be a strong, strategic voice for the sector.NCVS has a new location and office address Our vision is a thriving voluntary, community and social enterprise sector (VCSE) in Nottingham that improves the quality of people's lives in the city. Together, our networks are a voice for the voluntary sector in local, regional and national policy planning and development, leading to improved service delivery for all communities.įind out more about the staff, trustees and volunteers behind NCVS on our Meet the Team page. We have an important role in helping to facilitate representative partnerships which fully recognise the strengths, challenges and interests of our diverse local voluntary, community and social enterprise (VCSE) sector. We actively promote volunteering and community action, supporting local charities and community groups to find the most appropriate volunteers, attract skilled staff and trustees, and to share stories about their work.
#CVS NOTTINGHAM PLUS#
Our support includes quality training, plus one-to-one guidance on funding, governance, policy development and volunteer management. Voices: speaking up for the voluntary sector on issues crucial to its future, and increasing the sector’s access to, and influence upon, decision makers.Voluntary sector development: strengthening the voluntary sector’s capacity to help its clients through promoting best practice, funding advice and training.Volunteering: improving the quality of volunteering and breadth of volunteering opportunities across the city.Nottingham CVS supports the voluntary and community sector through: Private sector businesses are set up to make a profit for their owners and shareholders.

emergency services, healthcare, city/borough councils, education. Public sector services are controlled by central or local government e.g. 'Third sector' distinguishes our work from the public sector and the private sector. Some people prefer to use the term civil society, or the social sector, or the third sector. You may see this referred to as the voluntary, community and social enterprise sector, or VCSE for short.

The voluntary and community sector is the collective name for local community groups, voluntary organisations, charities, faith groups, social enterprises and community interest companies. Established in 1875, Nottingham Community and Voluntary Service aims to improve the quality of people’s lives in Nottingham by strengthening the voluntary and community sector.
