We’re making improvements that help communities every day – whether that’s investing in buildings, supporting local projects or making it easier to travel sustainably.
These changes are part of our ongoing commitment to supporting communities, providing high-quality services and making Surrey a better place to live. Here’s a few examples:
Investing in places that matter
We’re investing over £440 million to improve buildings that matter to our communities.
This includes expanding specialist school places with new Special Educational Needs (SEN) units in mainstream schools. The opening of Hopescourt School, a 200-place specialist free school in Walton-on-Thames in spring 2026.
We’re building extra care housing for older people, short breaks centres for adults with disabilities and more Children’s Homes to support young people in care.
Libraries are being upgraded, and a new community hub is coming to Weybridge, and we’ve made improvements at Gypsy, Roma and Traveller sites. To keep roads safe in winter, we’ve built new salt barns at Merrow and Godstone.
Celebrating Surrey’s heritage
This summer, £350,000 of National Lottery funding is helping bring Surrey’s history to life!
The Fetcham Springs Archaeology Project has received £250,000. The funding will be used to explore thousands of years of human activity from the Ice Age to the Saxon era. The project offers volunteering, workshops and free school visits opportunities.
£99,781 has been awarded to What Keeps Us Well, a partnership project run by Surrey Heritage and It’s Not Your Birthday But. This will look at how people stayed well in the past. It aims to inspire conversations about identity, belonging and wellbeing.
Modern spaces for life’s milestones
We’re transforming Surrey’s Registration Services to give residents a better experience at life’s key moments. Over the past year, we’ve modernised older buildings and made them more energy efficient. We’ve reopened Rylston in Weybridge as a premium ceremonies venue, with sustainable upgrades and elegant décor.
We’re also making it easier to register births and deaths by offering appointments at newly refurbished library hubs in Epsom and Staines-upon-Thames, with Guildford Library joining by October 2026.
Cleaner, greener travel
We’ve invested over £16 million in 34 zero emission hydrogen buses. These buses, now operating across Surrey, are part of the UK’s largest hydrogen bus fleet. These buses run on green hydrogen. They’re helping cut carbon emissions and making journeys more reliable for the nearly 27 million people who used Surrey’s bus network last year.