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Grey Belt

This is the press release issued by Labour regarding the Grey Belt proposition. Labour pledges housebuilding drive on Grey Belt with ‘golden rules’ to boost public services, affordable homes and improve green spaces Keir Starmer has today [Friday] set out five ‘golden rules’ for Grey Belt housebuilding, pledging to deliver affordable homes, boost infrastructure and public services like schools and GPs, and improve genuine green spaces. Building 1.5 million homes over the next parliament is a key plank of Labour’s policy programme, with a promise to reform planning rules at pace, to “take on the blockers and back the dream of home ownership.” While reiterating that Labour will always take a 'brownfield first' approach to housing development, Keir Starmer and Angela Rayner are also pledging to release some land currently classed as Green Belt to build the homes Britain needs, “in light of abject Tory failure to build the homes our country needs.” On a visit to a housing developme
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Thank you Kevin

If you have listened to episode 118 of the podcast you will have heard that it is the last to be supported by Cavendish. If you listened to episode 100 all the way through you will know that, when I first committed to starting a podcast I had to then work out how to do so, and being frankly too lazy to learn how to mix and edit and too tight to buy any kit myself, I needed a sponsor. Late one night, possibly after a glass of wine, or two, I tweeted something tongue-in-cheek along the lines of ‘do any of my work friends responsible for a marketing budget want to get in on the ground floor of the country’s next big podcast’. Kevin Whitmore at BECG, now Cavendish, emailed me the next day inviting me to have a chat and whatever the podcast has become is because of that. I will always be grateful to Kevin for backing the podcast to this point and to the wider team at Cavendish who have helped me with the editing, latterly Ashley Bellinger. I would also like to thank Ellis Robinson and Vicky

Podcast episode 118: Banishing Boxland

The Prime Minister recently announced plans to "turbocharge" development within England's largest towns and cities as part of the recent ' Brownfield Reform Day ' announcements. I thought then that now would be a good time to share a conversation that I recorded online back in August 2023 with old friends of the podcast David Milner and Rebecca Coley , and new friend of the podcast Mark Aylward , about the redevelopment of big box retail parks. It is available via this link or from iTunes and Spotify . The prompt for the conversation was this 2018 report that I had come across by Create Streets and Policy Exchange called ‘Better Brownfield’, which claimed that there are over 1200 sites across London currently occupied by single-storey big box retail and industrial sheds and that, by ‘banishing boxland’, these sites could accommodate between 250,000 and 300,000 new homes. Who owns and manages assets like these? What is the market like for big boxes in the new wo

Podcast episode 117: Capturing the Zeitgeist

Episode 117 of the podcast is available now via this link or from iTunes and Spotify . This is a ramblechat that I recorded at Soho Radio Studios in London with friends of the podcast Hashi Mohamed , Simon Ricketts , Nicola Gooch and Andrew Taylo r during which we reflect on another exciting few weeks in the fast-paced, ever-changing, rock and roll world of town and country planning. The conversation, recorded at the end of February 2024, takes in the back-dating of Section 106 indexation and what that says about local authority finances; the need to consider PPAs, statutory consultees and performance targets in the round; BNG and my debut appearance on Countryfile ; the Brownfield Reform Day consultations on a presumption in favour of brownfield development, permitted development rights and the Mayor of London’s call-in powers; and the Competition & Markets Authority's report on the housebuilding industry. All in approximately 45 minutes or so...

Podcast episode 116: Critical Infrastructure.

Episode 116 of the podcast is available now via this link or from Apple and Spotify . Building GP surgeries, schools and roads is not just difficult it is so difficult, according to no less of an expert on such matters than the Prime Minister, as to be a reason to not even contemplate growing existing towns and cities. In introducing recent proposals to put “rocket boosters” under construction in existing built-up areas, Rishi Sunak was quoted in The Times as saying that “We need to build homes in the places where people need and want them. There’s little point trying to force large new estates on our countryside and Green Belt when that is where public resistance to development is strongest and where the GP surgeries, schools and roads don’t exist to support new communities.” It is not uncommon though to see opinion polls from time to time highlighting that for people who are not supportive of more homes being built, building more or improving existing medical facilities would like

Findings from the CMA’s market study of the housebuilding sector

The Competition & Markets Authority (CMA) has published the most forensic analysis of the housebuilding sector's interaction with the planning system since the Barker Review of 2004. The final report is available here  and is essential reading for any planning and property professionals because it serves two very important purposes. Firstly, it lays bare many of the challenges that planning and property professionals have to grapple with on a daily basis and in a clear-eyed way deals with some of the misunderstandings about the homebuilding sector. Planning In order to deliver a given number of homes, the number of planning permissions granted must be sustained at a somewhat higher level, over an extended period, as a proportion of permissions will lapse or be re-applications relating to a previously permissioned project (4.13). The number of new permissions has at no point been significantly above 300,000, indicating that insufficient new permissions are being granted to suppo

Brownfield Reform Day

After another exciting week in the madcap, rock and roll, ever-changing world of town and country planning, it was striking to read this from Everton manager Sean Dyche in a Sunday Times interview with Matthew Syed. “And I think love is shown by telling the truth. The whole truth. Sometimes, the brutal truth. Sure, you need to say it respectfully. Sometimes, you need to say it gently. But unless you are prepared to say it how it is, you are misleading someone. Maybe even lying to them. But this is the problem in the world today: people prefer perception over reality.” The reality of the housing crisis is the image below that was included in a Sunday Times article  the week before in which Housing Secretary Michael Gove sought to make the case for new homes on the basis that, if young people cannot live in their own, they might give up on democracy and capitalism (and the Conservative Party). The public’s perception of the housing crisis, the Housing Secretary hopes, is that the Govern