Today (24 July 2023), as part of a long-term plan for housing, the
Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities have committed to a new era of regeneration, inner-city
densification and housing delivery across England, with
transformational plans to supply beautiful, safe, decent homes in
places with high-growth potential in partnership with local
communities. Building on work already underway to meet our
commitment in the Levelling Up...Request free trial
- Today (24 July 2023), as part of a long-term plan for
housing, the Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Levelling
Up, Housing and Communities have committed to a new era of
regeneration, inner-city densification and housing delivery
across England, with transformational plans to supply beautiful,
safe, decent homes in places with high-growth potential in
partnership with local communities.
- Building on work already underway to meet our commitment in
the Levelling Up White Paper to regenerate 20 of our towns and
cities, the Levelling Up Secretary has announced the regeneration
and renaissance of a further 3 English cities, committing to
transformational change in Cambridge, central London and central
Leeds.
- This follows work to level up towns and cities across the
country – including in Sheffield and Wolverhampton. The Levelling
Up Secretary also outlined plans to continue working closely with
local partners in Barrow, to help make Barrow a new powerhouse of
the North.
- £800 million will also be allocated today from the £1.5
billion Brownfield, Infrastructure and Land fund to unlock up to
56,000 new homes on brownfield sites, taking an infrastructure
first approach to build up our cities. We are funding Homes
England with £550 million, which with income generated will mean
a total investment of £1 billion. We are also providing landmark
investments of £150 million to Greater Manchester and £100
million to the West Midlands.
- Additional reforms to the planning system will speed up new
developments, put power in the hands of local communities to
build their own homes, and unlock planning decisions – with a new
fund of £24 million to scale up local planning capacity, and an
additional £13.5 million to stand up a new “super-squad” of
experts to support large scale development projects.
Regeneration of 20 places
Following the commitment in the Levelling Up White Paper to
regenerate 20 places, the Levelling Up Secretary and Prime
Minister set out further plans today on Cambridge, and inner-city
London and central Leeds.
Proposals will see Cambridge supercharged as Europe’s science
capital, addressing constraints that have left the city with some
of the most expensive property markets outside London, and
companies fighting over extremely limited lab space and
commercial property with prices that rival London, Paris and
Amsterdam.
These ambitious plans to support Cambridge include a vision for a
new quarter of well-designed, sustainable and beautiful
neighbourhoods for people to live in, work and study. A quarter
with space for cutting-edge laboratories, commercial developments
fully adapted to climate change and that is green, with life
science facilities encircled by country parkland and woodland
accessible to all who live in Cambridge.
Any development of this scale will have substantial
infrastructure requirements. The government will deliver as much
of the infrastructure and affordable housing as possible using
land value capture – with the local area benefiting from the
significant increase in land values that can occur when
agricultural land is permitted for residential and commercial
development. Land values will reflect the substantial
contributions required to unlock the development
(see annex).
A Cambridge Delivery Group, chaired by Peter Freeman and backed
by £5 million, will be established to begin driving forward this
project. The Group will work to turn this vision into a reality,
taking a lead on identifying the housing, infrastructure,
services and green space required. It will also consider options
for an appropriate delivery mechanism that will be needed to lead
the long-term work on planning, land acquisition and engagement
with developers, starting in this Parliament but running through
the next few years as development takes shape.
In the meantime, the Delivery Group will take forward immediate
action to address barriers such as water scarcity across the
city, including:
- Convening a Water Scarcity Working Group with the Environment
Agency, Ofwat, central and local government and innovators across
industries to identify and accelerate plans to address water
constraints. The Group will include all relevant partners to
understand what it would take to accelerate building the proposed
new Fens Reservoir and enabling Cambridge to reach its economic
potential.
- Supporting the council in efforts to make sure new
developments proposed as part of the local plan can be as
sustainable as possible, including whether new houses in planned
developments such as Waterbeach and Hartree can be made more
water efficient. To support this, the government is announcing
today a £3 million funding pot to help support measures to
improve the water efficiency of existing homes and commercial
property across Cambridge, to help offset demands created by new
developments in the local plan.
- The government will also take definitive action to unblock
development where it has stalled, providing £500,000 of funding
to assist with planning capacity. Cambridge City Council, Anglian
Water, Land Securities PLC and Homes England will work together
to accelerate the relocation of water treatment works in
Northeast Cambridge (subject to planning permission), unlocking
an entire new City quarter – delivering approaching 6,000
sustainable well-designed homes in thriving neighbourhoods – as
well as schools, parks and over 1 million square feet of much
needed commercial life science research space.
In addition to Cambridge, today the government has also
announced:
- A ‘Docklands 2.0’ vision in East London for up to 65,000
homes across multiple sites of significant scale including at
Thamesmead, Beckton and Silvertown. Beautiful, well-connected
homes and new landscaped parkland will be integral to the vision.
We will look at how we can ensure better transport connections
from east to west, to ‘crowd in’ local and private investment,
and to build the best evidence on how and whether HMG will invest
in the future.
- London will also see the benefits of this government’s
decision to allow the Affordable Homes Programme to be directed
towards regeneration for the first time – with up to £1 billion
available in London alone – as part of a transformative reform
that will change how we level up communities across the country.
We have also made £1 million available to push forward work with
the Mayor to consider how we drive housing delivery in London,
including looking at innovative new ways that industrial land can
be released for housing.
-
A commitment to work with local partners in central Leeds, to
regenerate the city centre and explore how a West Yorkshire
mass transit system could open up the city to many more
workers across the city’s burgeoning financial, digital and
legal sectors. This builds on the £40 million that is already
being provided by the government to West Yorkshire Combined
Authority to support development of the mass transit system
and offer a greener, quicker and more reliable option of
travel. The government will accelerate work in the centre of
Leeds by identifying the remaining barriers to delivery for
key housing growth sites within the city rim, including the
South Bank, Innovation Arc, and local and neighbourhood
plans, potentially delivering up to 20,000 new homes on these
sites over the next decade. The government will also work
with local authorities to adapt existing HS2 land safeguarded
in Leeds City Centre where appropriate, supporting economic
growth and housing delivery. Additional revenue funding will
be provided to support capacity and development to deliver
these ambitions.
- Plans to continue working closely with local partners in
Barrow-in-Furness, to help make it a new powerhouse of the North
– extending beyond its current boundaries with thousands of new
homes and space for new businesses to benefit from the scientific
and technical expertise already clustered there.
- We are also investing £800 million from the £1.5 billion
Brownfield, Infrastructure and Land fund to unlock up to 56,000
new homes across England, to transform disused site and create
vibrant communities for people to live and work, while also
protecting our cherished green spaces, including further
accelerating activity in areas such as Sheffield. We are funding
Homes England with £550 million which, in real terms, will be an
investment of up to £1 billion through the reinvestment of
receipts back into the fund. As set out previously, we are also
providing £250 million to Greater Manchester and West Midlands
Combined Authorities.
Building up and building out across the country
In addition to targeted action in a few high-potential areas, the
government’s plan delivers a package of reforms to unleash
building on underused sites in high-demand regions.
Densification, done the right way, will transform the
opportunities available to people across the country – our inner
cities have much lower population densities than comparable
Western countries, impacting our productivity. The plan therefore
includes:
- Launching a consultation on new Permitted Development Rights,
to provide more certainty over some types of development, and how
design codes might apply to certain rights to protect local
character and give developers greater confidence. New and amended
permitted development rights would make it easier to convert
larger department stores, space above shops and office space. The
plan also backs rural communities, with changes to support farm
diversification and development, to allow businesses to extend
and more outdoor markets to be held. The government will consult
on further measures in the Autumn on how to better support
existing homeowners to extend their homes. The government will
continue to ensure that local removal of permitted development
rights through Article 4 Directions will only be agreed where
there is evidence of wholly unacceptable impacts.
- Taking steps to unblock the bottlenecks in the planning
system that are choking and slowing down development, and
stopping growth and investment by:
- Launching a new £24 million Planning Skills Delivery Fund
to clear planning backlogs and get the right skills in place.
- Establishing a new “super-squad” team of leading planners
and other experts charged with working across the planning
system to unblock major housing developments, underpinned by
£13.5 million in funding. The team will first be deployed in
Cambridge to boost our plans in the city, before also looking
at sites across our eight Investment Zones in England, to
provide high-quality homes to go alongside the high-quality
jobs being created there.
- Increasing the amount developers pay in planning fees,
following our recent consultation, to ensure all planning
departments are better resourced.
The government’s commitment to development and regeneration in
and around existing town and city centres is also guiding its
consideration of responses to the consultation on updating the
National Planning Policy Framework. The government wants to make
it easier to progress such developments, and to that end is clear
that:
- Development should proceed on sites that are adopted in a
local plan with full input from the local community, unless there
are strong reasons why it cannot.
- Local councils should be open and pragmatic in agreeing
changes to developments where conditions mean that the original
plan may no longer be viable, rather than losing the development
wholesale or seeing development mothballed.
- Better use should be made of small pockets of brownfield land
by being more permissive, so more homes can be built more
quickly, where and how it makes sense, giving more confidence and
certainty to SME builders.
Later in the year, the government will pass the Levelling Up and
Regeneration Bill to put in place our reforms to the planning
system that will create more beautiful and sustainable homes in
the right places, and publish updates to the National Planning
Policy Framework.
Communities taking back control / building beautiful
everywhere
To deliver housing anywhere, all new homes built will need to be
accepted by the community – they will need to be beautiful,
well-connected, designed with local people in mind and be
accompanied by the right community infrastructure and green
space. Communities must have a say in how and where homes are
built.
In this plan, communities will be supported to be at the heart of
new development in their areas. This will be achieved by:
- Establishing the Office for Place in Stoke-on-Trent, a new
body to lead a design revolution, ensuring beautiful new homes
are built according to a simple design code supported by local
people. The Office for Place will support residents to demand
what they find beautiful from developers – ensuring every local
place is built to reflect the individual local character and
beauty of every community across the country. Nicholas Boys Smith
has been appointed as the interim chair.
- Supporting councils to deliver high quality up to date local
plans, launching a consultation to seek views on our proposals to
simplify the system of developing a new plan. Local plans are the
best way to ensure the right homes are built in the right places,
so the government will work with councils to reduce the cost and
bureaucracy associated with getting an updated plan in place. The
government is also clear that local authorities should continue
to develop their local plans, ensuring local people get their
say.
Building safely
In all buildings, the first priority must be keeping people safe.
Through the landmark Building Safety Act 2022, the government has
overhauled the way we do so with a “golden thread” of
accountability and protections for leaseholders from the ruinous
costs of fixing the mistakes of others.
The government will not be complacent in its approach to safety –
recognising that, as work progresses to densify our towns and
cities, people must be given unimpeachable confidence that new
homes are safe and decent to live in. This long-term plan for
housing therefore builds on our existing progress by:
- Confirming the intention to mandate second staircases in new
residential buildings above 18m, following confirmation from
expert bodies that they support this threshold. This responds to
the call from the sector for coherence and certainty. This is a
considered and gradual evolution of safety standards, which, when
taken with our other fire safety measures and reforms ensures the
safety of people in all tall buildings – both new and existing.
The
Government is clear that this new regulation cannot jeopardise
the supply of homes by disrupting schemes that have been planned
for years. DLUHC will work rapidly with industry and regulators
over the summer to design transitional arrangements with the aim
of securing the viability of projects which are already underway,
avoiding delays where there are other more appropriate
mitigations.
- Opening the Cladding Safety Scheme to all eligible buildings,
ensuring that no leaseholder will be out of pocket to fix
dangerous cladding in medium or high-rise buildings.
Annex
The development of a new quarter in Cambridge will have
substantial infrastructure requirements, including water, power,
transport, affordable housing, environmental and social
infrastructure. Permitting such a development will also result in
substantial increases in land values above the existing use value
of the land.
Government viability guidance sets out that when undertaking a
viability appraisal, the value allowed for the purchase of land
should in general be based on the value of the land in its
existing use, plus an appropriate premium for the landowner. The
government intends to explore recommendations about what a
reasonable premium to agricultural landowners should be.
Building on this approach, the government intends that a
consultation will be undertaken to inform the policy on a
reasonable premium for landowners above existing use value, to
support the development of plans for the new quarter. To the
extent that infrastructure and affordable housing need justifies
this position, the government anticipates that policy will be set
to capture land value uplift above the premium. This will enable
landowners to receive fair compensation for their land while
minimising the public sector investment required to bring the
development forward.
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