The project is a bold step towards a more hopeful future for nature in the UK’s capital city. Bringing back these species will create lasting connections between nature and the community, rewilding the landscape in the heart of East London to boost biodiversity and local wellbeing.
Rewilding East London will be delivered in partnership between London Wildlife Trust and the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham and supported by the Mayor of London. The project will increase local biodiversity while improving access to nature, outdoor learning, and create opportunities for growth. It forms part of London Wildlife Trust’s wider mission to restore nature, enrich ecosystems, and reconnect people with wildlife across the capital.
Set at Eastbrookend Country Park in Dagenham, the project builds on extensive work to restore and expand important wetland habitats, laying the foundations for the reintroduction of these two iconic native species. The storks are expected on site in autumn 2026, with beavers arriving the following year.
A purpose-built aviary will house the reintroduced white storks, whose chicks will eventually be released to help establish a new breeding population in the area. The large nests of storks provide valuable habitats for smaller birds, and their natural feeding behaviours can support ecosystem health.
The beavers will be released into a publicly accessible enclosure featuring two lakes, under licence from Natural England. As renowned ‘ecosystem engineers’, beavers have an extraordinary ability to reshape their surroundings, creating rich wetland habitats that support a wide variety of wildlife. These include wetland plants and invertebrate to birds, bats, fish and small mammals.
Alongside this, an extensive community outreach programme will help Londoners learn about and connect with these iconic native species and give people the chance to play an active role in their return. Rewilding East London will give hope and inspiration through a nature recovery success story in an urban environment; it will build a relationship between Londoners and beavers and storks that inspires pride, an active interest in nature recovery, and a willingness to co-exist with these animals as they become a re-established part of London’s ecology.