Finally had a chance to catch-up with Centre for Cities report on where to build homes for Britain's most successful cities. In the ten least affordable (British) cities building out every brownfield site delivers a total of 425,000 extra houses. If you go outside of their existing built-up area and use land within 25 minute walk of an existing train station you could add up to 1.4 million new homes (at reasonable densities). If neighbouring authorities could be made to cooperate that total rises to 3.4 million homes within 2 km of existing train stations
I see Richard Rogers had a piece in the Evening Standard last night calling for a greater focus on d...
[Posted by Prof Paul Cheshire] Almost every reasonable person must now accept the case that we need ...
To slow the rate of increase of housing unaffordability we have to build on the Greenbelt. But relea...
I liked this sequence of maps from Audacity showing land use restrictions in England
While politicians of all stripes talk about the need to build more homes, very little detail has bee...
The housing crisis is arguably the biggest challenge facing economically successful cities. It has g...
David Cameron has announced a plan to release thousands of acres of publicly-owned brownfield land f...
In 1998, approximately 50% of development occurred on brownfield land (a figure that had been remark...
This paper reports on the findings of a study that aimed to help fill the information gap left by th...
This paper reports on the findings of a study that aimed to help fill the information gap left by th...
This paper reports on the findings of a study that aimed to help fill the information gap left by th...
With a growing population, government is under increasing pressure to build more and more housing de...
The government has provided more details on the new homes bonus that local councils will get when th...
In all the debate around the government's planning reforms, we are in danger of losing sight of the ...
Posted by Tim Leunig, SERC, LSE and CentreForum I recently visited Bordon, a small town in North Eas...
I see Richard Rogers had a piece in the Evening Standard last night calling for a greater focus on d...
[Posted by Prof Paul Cheshire] Almost every reasonable person must now accept the case that we need ...
To slow the rate of increase of housing unaffordability we have to build on the Greenbelt. But relea...
I liked this sequence of maps from Audacity showing land use restrictions in England
While politicians of all stripes talk about the need to build more homes, very little detail has bee...
The housing crisis is arguably the biggest challenge facing economically successful cities. It has g...
David Cameron has announced a plan to release thousands of acres of publicly-owned brownfield land f...
In 1998, approximately 50% of development occurred on brownfield land (a figure that had been remark...
This paper reports on the findings of a study that aimed to help fill the information gap left by th...
This paper reports on the findings of a study that aimed to help fill the information gap left by th...
This paper reports on the findings of a study that aimed to help fill the information gap left by th...
With a growing population, government is under increasing pressure to build more and more housing de...
The government has provided more details on the new homes bonus that local councils will get when th...
In all the debate around the government's planning reforms, we are in danger of losing sight of the ...
Posted by Tim Leunig, SERC, LSE and CentreForum I recently visited Bordon, a small town in North Eas...
I see Richard Rogers had a piece in the Evening Standard last night calling for a greater focus on d...
[Posted by Prof Paul Cheshire] Almost every reasonable person must now accept the case that we need ...
To slow the rate of increase of housing unaffordability we have to build on the Greenbelt. But relea...