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[personal profile] bunn
Apparently most people surveyed about how much of Britain is built up guessed at 50%, but it's closer to 11%. The presenter of this piece of news last night seemed to think this meant we should go ahead and build on more land.

Surely it's the other way round? Only 11% of land is built up, but that is in the most desirable / liveable/ workable areas, so most of the people that live there feel much more overcrowded than they really are, because although only 11% of the UK is built on, that 11% is where they live. Therefore we should be thinking hard about whether it's a good idea to build more in those areas, because people there are already feeling suffocated.

I also immediately wondered how much of the remaining land is actually buildable upon, and is not mountain, flood plain, nature reserve, bog or moorland.

"The houses are dead and there is too little that grows and is glad." :-(

Date: 2006-12-06 05:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-marquis.livejournal.com
To be honest the two recent reviews of planning and the built environment smack very much of vested interest. There is actually a lot of building space available in Britain around towns that have deindustrialised (like ours) for a start. The problem is that companies want to operate in the South East and so their workewrs need to live nearish (where near is a funny term) . However, this is also where there is no longer enough free space with easy road/rail access and planning permisssion. Around my mum's old house fields that were farmed ten years ago are now housing estates, the only thing saving some bits of the South Downs there are that they are owned by the National Trust. And I've not even mentioned the problems of storage, supply and demand that this puts on the water table and supply/sewerage systems.

Some of us were hoping that this would push companies to move northwards and thus ease pressures on the South East (housing stock, roads, rail, green belt protection, rents & house prices). Sadly reports like this and moves to take planning authority away from elected representatives, that have to answer to local people, will mean that companies take the easy option of staying put and turning the south east into an ugly sprawl of concrete, with even Pellinor's leafy suburbs being redeveloped. Examples of that latter point being a) what was the garden of a house at the end of [livejournal.com profile] pellegrina's road has had a garage built and then the site flattened and a 3 bed house put up, and b) souped up granny annexes that are almsot whole new houses going up in gardens around Brighton, c) a pair of family semis at the top of our road that have had a two floor extension built on the back that extends as much as the original house.

Date: 2006-12-06 05:49 pm (UTC)
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From: [identity profile] bunn.livejournal.com
... And as the housing density goes up, the more people get on one another's wicks, and the community suffers.

I think there are too many people on this island already, and would like to see the encouragement of emigration. It appears there are lots of people who want to come here, well, good, I am sure there must equally be plenty of people who just need a good spike up the bum to get them to leave, since they don't seem to care much for the place.

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