Thank you to the following people who have kindly donated towards the Biggin Hill poppies.



Biggin Hill Residents Association
The site for the residents of Biggin Hill, Bromley, Kent.
Blundell’s Squash Club
Jail Lane Biggin Hill Kent TN163AU – 01959 573240
Blundell’s is hosting a fund-raising Auction
On Saturday 6th September 2025. From 7pm.
We have a large variety of lots from Services to Activities and Goods, initial items listed below. More being added all the time.
Everybody Welcome
Advance bids accepted up to 12 noon on the day
All monies raised are for the save Blundell’s Fund.


AUCTION LOTS
SERVICES – etc ACTIVITIES
Beauty Treatment` Yoga for up to 15 + afternoon tea
2 hours of Cleaning Painting Lesson
Home Hair Appointment Archery Session for 2
Massage 4 Ball Golf – Hever
Massage 4 Ball Golf – West Kent
2 hours of gardening +
Box of gardening items .
Acupuncture Session .
.
GOODS
3 Course Meal for up to 10 preparedby local Chef (at Blundells)
6 x Carvery Meal for 2 (at Blundells)
4 Course Dining Experience with fizz atMarco Pierre White’s London Steak House
7.5 ltr Triple Slow Cookerand warming station
Professional Pizza press (new -original price £150)
The 3 Teddy Bears (XL, L & M – new)
Cockburns Port
CREED Perfume (unopened, original price £265)
Box of 2 quality wines & glasses
2 x Champagne
Sound Bar (new)
Millwall signed shirt (25/26 Season)
Millwall signed football (25/26 Season)
Bromley Town signed shirt (25/26 Season)
Built-in BBQ (new)
Bluetooth Speaker with lights etc (new)
Silent Night Dual Electric Blanket (new)
Ted Baker Candle Set (new)
Beach Bag with contents(beach towel, suntan lotion, water bottle etc – (new)
Original Painting
Carvela Trainers (size 5) As new, shocking pink with silver trim
Go-Pro Camera(new)
QE2 boxed Whisky Flagon (unopened)
DUNE Black Evening Bag (new)
8 x 8” Royal Dalton Painted plates + 1 x 11” – by Mike Bensley (with Certificates)
Lumineer Hand-controlled Action Orb (new)
Exercise equipment (used& new)
3 x Jigsaws (used)
More items arriving daily – new lots to be advised.
SOME ITEMS HAVE A RESERVE- Advance bids accepted
Below is a message from Police Sergeant Tony Brown….
Since I have taken over as the Ward Sergeant I am shocked at the amount of calls and emails from residents reporting both crimes in progress, past crimes and Anti social behaviour to the ward phones (which will be decommissions very soon) and ward email boxes. My team of officers and staff is very low at the moment, with two more officers hopefully joining us by the end of the year. With entitled annual leave, course and operational abstractions due to ULEZ camera issues, Protests in central London and back filling Emergency response teams these phones and emails are not checked for days.
Please could you help me in passing the message that ALL reports regardless of the issues, ASB and or Crimes regardless when happened MUST either be reported online via the Met police website or over the phone by calling 101 for non-emergency or 999 for emergency.
https://www.met.police.uk/contact/af/contact-us-beta/contact-us
| Contact us – Metropolitan Police Call 999 in emergency situations like these: there is an immediate danger to life someone is using violence or is threatening to be violent a road traffic collision where life is at risk, or the road is blocked a crime is happening right now, like a house burglary or a theft If you accidentally dial 999, please stay on the line and tell the operator you’re safe and that no crime has occurred … www.met.police.uk |
If the residents have the time to send a detailed email I am sure they could complete a short online reporting form, which logs the incident, send to be triaged and someone will complete a report and if an ASB local issue should be sent to me to review and allocate.
I feel together as a community we can do great things, but the local residents whom continue to send emails and phone the ward phone are feeling unheard due to the way they are not reporting correctly, and feel that were not listening.
Thank you for listening and I hope that together we can reduce ASB and Crimes on the Ward.
Best wishes,
Police Sergeant Tony Brown LCGI
PS 408SN
(Licentiateship City & Guilds Institute – Leadership & Management)
Tony Brown 408SN | Police Sergeant | Darwin & Biggin Hill SNT | South Area BCU | TP | Metropolitan Police Service

THE STORY BEHIND BIGGIN HILL’S VILLAGE SIGN.
BACKGROUND TO THE VILLAGE SIGN.
It was back sometime during the Summer of late 1998 that David Haslam the then Chairman of Biggin Hill and District Residents Association was informed that the Local Authority had access to a source of funding, that was available to support Villages that didn’t have a proper village sign to acquire one. This fund would provide half of the cost of manufacture and erecting of a village sign that had the approval of the Local Authority and the participating community group submitting the design. From memory I believe that the rules recognised request for funding from properly constituted community groups or properly constituted Residents Associations.
The London Borough of Bromley were aware that they had several villages that were part of LB Bromley that didn’t have a Village Sign, Leaves Green was another village close to Biggin Hill that also qualified for a grant towards their village sign. The Council financial offered covered half the cost of manufacture of the sign and its placement; but didn’t include the cost of any proposed design artwork. The sign that you can now see, placed on the Village Green, adjacent to the junction of Jail Lane and Main Road, was officially unveiled by the then Mayor of Bromley on the 31st of October 1998, and was jointly funded by Council grant and Biggin Hill & District Residents Association.
THE PROCESS
As someone involved in the world of architecture, David Haslam realised that a design brief was necessary. David Haslam was at that time, the Chairman of the Biggin Hill & District Residents Association, and a Governor of Charles Darwin Secondary School.(1978 – 2024)
The Biggin Hill Residents Association decided to participate and paid to produce the formal design, by offering a cash prize, which would be paid to the winning individual or team of Charles Darwin pupils/students who produced the winning design.
It was felt by the committee of the Residents Association that there were some key elements which should feature in the finished design. To achieve this David Haslam as chairman produced a Design Brief describing those key elements which should be incorporated in the finished village sign.
THE DESIGN BRIEF
The key elements to be included relate to: –
1 Biggin Hill has for a long time been a community divided geographically between Top and Bottom, with a Top Plateau, and the Valley, these two elements are represented by a valley with a sunset sporting three rays of sunlight, radiating outward.
We have now added a Gallery page to the website, displaying images of previous activities of the Biggin Hill Residents Association.
If any residents have interesting photos of the area please send them to ian@ianramage.co.uk and we will add them to the display.






Come along on the 16th February to help tidy up your Community.
