Projects Delivered By The Nurture Collective Projects CIC
The Community Hub


The Community Hub offers supportive projects for every age and stage of family life, from pregnancy through the early years and beyond. Our core focus is on providing high-quality, community-funded programmes that help people learn, connect and feel empowered. We also deliver wider community wellbeing projects where funding allows, offering inclusive activities that bring people together and strengthen local connections.
All programmes are delivered independently by The Nurture Collective CIC, a community-interest organisation committed to reducing barriers for families. Bambinis Play Café is the delivery site for these programmes and is not the organisation providing or running the projects. Explore our current projects below.

The Perinatal Hub Project
Funded By The National Lottery
This project is designed to empower families on maternity leave who may struggle to access high-quality perinatal support due to financial pressures. We particularly support parents who are self-employed, on low incomes, or not receiving enhanced maternity pay, ensuring they can still access the care and community they deserve.
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Our Perinatal Hub follows a supportive flow of three connected courses — antenatal education, postnatal yoga, and baby bonding & massage — that give families a continuous journey of learning, confidence-building, and support. This structure helps parents to build meaningful social connections, settle into early parenthood with reassurance, and feel empowered at every stage of the perinatal period.

Move For Mental Wellbeing Project
Part - Funded By Sport England

This project provides weekly movement sessions for children and young people aged 5 to 16 who may struggle with confidence and anxiety, or who feel overwhelmed in loud or high-pressure environments.
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Through small-group yoga, dance, and non-contact boxing, sessions support children to build resilience, confidence, and a positive relationship with movement. Activities are delivered in a calm, inclusive setting and are adapted to different ages and needs, helping participants feel safe, supported, and encouraged to take part.
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The programme focuses on movement as a tool for emotional regulation, wellbeing, and self-belief, rather than competition, creating a positive and accessible pathway into regular physical activity.
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A small participant fee contributes to costs not covered by the grant, supporting the sustainability of the programme while keeping sessions accessible and to a maximum of 8 participants.​

