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Towards an Urban Renaissance

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Towards an Urban Renaissance httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen334Tow

Towards an Urban Renaissance was a report written by the United Kingdom's Urban Task Force chaired by Lord Rogers of Riverside and published on 29 June 1999. It examined the question of how 4 million projected new homes over 25 years, might be accommodated in the UK without further encroachment into the green belt or other areas of countryside.

The review leading to the published report was commissioned by the then Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott in 1998, to identify the causes of urban decline and establish a vision for Britain's cities based on the principles of design excellence, social well-being and environmental responsibility. Participants included Peter Hall.

Towards an Urban Renaissance resulted in the Our Towns and Cities - the Future - The Urban White Paper published in 2000, and was influential in the revised Planning policy guidance note 3: Housing which was also published in 2000.

Rogers published an independent update titled Towards a Strong Urban Renaissance in 2005.

Key recommendations

  • Design-led urban regeneration process and the designation of special urban policy areas.
  • Reform of the planning system and involvement of local people in decision making and neighbourhood level.
  • The building of 60% of new housing as schemes on brownfield land.
  • Better use of existing housing stock.
  • The relaxation of Local Planning Authority's standards relating to density and separation distances between dwellings
  • The better integration of housing with highways (relaxation of parking standards and designing the roads around the housing rather than the housing around the roads).
  • Improve non-car transport.
  • Better quality design.
  • References

    Towards an Urban Renaissance Wikipedia