How The Green Belt Can Solve the UK Housing Crisis

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 41

  • @RealLifeArchitecture
    @RealLifeArchitecture  6 місяців тому

    If you would like to book a consultation with me you can do so here - www.reallifearchitecture.co.uk/online-services
    Please read the terms and conditions before you book.

  • @jimbo1637
    @jimbo1637 10 місяців тому +2

    As an American, it's never made sense to me how few Sky Scrapers there are in the UK. Even london doesn't have anywhere close to as many as comparably sized North American and Asian cities. If you tear down a block of run of the mill townhouses, you can easily replace them with a skyscraper that has 10 times as many units. Why not do that if the lack of housing is the problem?

  • @zororat
    @zororat 10 місяців тому +4

    Great video. After an agonising 3 year long appeal with our local council, against all the odds, we were able to get planning permission to build a modest house nestled amongst woodland in the greenbelt. But boy did we have to fight for it. We are grateful the gamble paid off and we get to build the house of our dreams but they certainly made us jump through hoops whilst we chased that carrot on a stick.
    We feel like it shouldn't be so difficult to get planning for people to put a roof over their head, especially when you are clearly going above and beyond to not only preserve the natural surroundings,but enhance and protect it. We would love to see more people like us do the same thing.

    • @RealLifeArchitecture
      @RealLifeArchitecture  10 місяців тому +1

      Well done, that sounds like an epic journey

    • @___Q-bot
      @___Q-bot 9 місяців тому

      I would like to know more about the story.

    • @Silas-lf4cc
      @Silas-lf4cc Місяць тому

      When you say 'modest house', does that mean bigger than you actually needed and did that involve cutting down any of the trees? I take it you didn't use the trees to make a small, timber framed house or cabin that has compost toilets and is all built from local materials?

  • @3d1e00
    @3d1e00 10 місяців тому +4

    The issue is the lack of new council owned social housing. Don't matter where you build them if they don't include lots of those. Also you need to remove right to buy.

    • @RealLifeArchitecture
      @RealLifeArchitecture  10 місяців тому +1

      Agreed

    • @___Q-bot
      @___Q-bot 9 місяців тому

      If the council have the money to do so, they would have already done.

    • @3d1e00
      @3d1e00 9 місяців тому

      @@___Q-bot yeah and the right to buy and central gov cuts have killed it. Pretty much killed the whole system really.

  • @SmartAndTidy
    @SmartAndTidy 10 місяців тому +3

    A welcome and thought provoking video. I live in a suburban new development south of Aberdeen. I love it. Why? Because I have a warm home that is cheap to heat, without rattling windows, with modest but sufficient off street parking. It's fashionable to knock such developments, but the fact is they sell well and satisfy the requirements of a home as a machine to live in. There is far too much sentimental guff categorising old houses as having character or charm, when they are high maintenance and their only real benefit is proximity to infrastructure (often overloaded like roads) because of when they were built.

    • @RealLifeArchitecture
      @RealLifeArchitecture  10 місяців тому

      👍

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 10 місяців тому

      Period homes are not high maintenance at all. New builds have far more faults and are built to fail. A solid investment for any work needed when you purchase (not too much should be required) and it will last another 100 years without much maintenance apart from internal decoration when needed. New builds mostly (about 90%) have faults through and through. They are too small, architecturally bankrupt and covered with tarmac not flagstones outside, then you have the depression factor - cookie-cutter homes for the culturally vacuous!

    • @Silas-lf4cc
      @Silas-lf4cc Місяць тому

      ​@@richardwills-woodward5340 I was about to comment myself but you've already uttered my sentiments so eloquently, you're exactly right! What's wrong with people, have they turned into joyless, brainwashed, Philistines??

  • @li51oj
    @li51oj 2 місяці тому +1

    Great video. Thank you. Maybe also mention how much land would be taken to service the new housing developments i.e. schools, community halls/places of worships, a general high street, healthcare, water, electric substations, buses etc.

    • @RealLifeArchitecture
      @RealLifeArchitecture  2 місяці тому +1

      Good point. Personally, I think we should build new towns with higher density and all the facilities. It’s easier to build new than to enlarge existing settlements.

  • @alastairharris1866
    @alastairharris1866 10 місяців тому +2

    in the east midlands then housing growth (and there has been a lot of it) is mostly on what used to be farm land, with some being on floodplains, and some being brownfield. We see examples of larger towns and cities mopping up smaller communities in a constant outward growth.
    Thing is, it is not solving the "housing crisis", in the sense that house prices are still rising due to demand, as we see the continuing inward migration growth. What we don't see is the consequent growth in "public" services - schools, medical facilities, front line responders, etc. And local transport remains patchy at best. And of course we are seeing less farming, so less local produce in the shops, and less farmers/farms. Coupled with more and more pointless regulation from whatever government ministry is currently seeking to make farmers lives difficult.

    • @RealLifeArchitecture
      @RealLifeArchitecture  10 місяців тому +1

      You have some great points there. Housing on its own is only part of the problem. This needs joined up thinking.

    • @___Q-bot
      @___Q-bot 9 місяців тому

      @@RealLifeArchitecture with good transportation infra and autonomous driving roads, populations of a city can be easily offloaded to nearby towns. Germany have less "dense populated hot spots" than England.

  • @howardtolman193
    @howardtolman193 10 місяців тому +4

    Interesting and relevant. Worth a watch.

  • @kendavis5686
    @kendavis5686 10 місяців тому +2

    Ok, so you are trying to deal briefly with a very complex issue. Firstly the planning system is broken and it will not be fixed by more building on the Greenbelt. People should not be priced out of home ownership but there are two primary ways of dealing with it. Firstly, people will generally move to where they can earn a reasonable living but our economy is now too biased towards the south-east. Government could change the tax system for company/job location which would move more jobs to areas with cheaper housing and land. They could also bias personal tax in a similar way. Secondly, you only mention greenbelt and brown sites but most urban areas (except perhaps large cities) have plenty of un and underused land because so many towns were built when land was cheap. My own town of Hastings is one such. In the past when land was cheap developers could afford to have large gardens or leave parcels of land which had poor ground (steep or less stable for cheap foundations). The uselss planning system, which largely only recognises standard developer houses finds it hard to deal with 'different' (contemporary?) designs on infill sites because they only know estate houses or copying the past. We will only get past this when somebody defines what makes 'beautiful' buildings and town planners understand, and work with, the design process. Living in existing urban areas is of course much more sustainable than on outer suburbs.

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 10 місяців тому

      But few want to live in apartments. Brownfield land dictates that is the case. Wrong housing type for the UK.

  • @go_away_plz
    @go_away_plz 9 місяців тому

    The housing crisis is also a crisis of public health and family finances. The single best thing you could do to vastly improve life for the majority of people in this country is build enough homes. The green belt is nice but the cost in actual human suffering is so high. I think we should be willing to give a little bit of it up

  • @TechOne7671
    @TechOne7671 10 місяців тому +3

    Good explanation, seems fair to me.

  • @user-ug8wx5er1w
    @user-ug8wx5er1w 10 місяців тому +3

    Immigration is the issue. It’s ruinous.

  • @clarksonad
    @clarksonad 10 місяців тому +2

    Totally agree on the greenbelt. The first priority should be building higher density housing around transport hubs with good access. SO many golf courses should be paved over with provision for actual public parks. It would be nice to see a zoning system with presumption in favour of building, let's say with approved typologies. Local Authorities should be more proactively masterplanning real, connected, joined up streets and making sure they are adoptable and then get construction companies in, a la the New Town in Edinburgh. Not sure why we allow developers to buy up any field, provide extremely limited ingress and egress and build rat warren cul de sac developments where people are cut off from their neighbours and amenities.
    I don't think planning is the only limitation, although reform would be good. Car dependent sprawl is an issue, and thought needs to be given to making sure the right mix of amenities, services and transport links are there. Developers don't want to shoulder this or even plan for it very well. We need more muscular Local Authorities or regional planning networks. Local Authorities also need more spending power to build social housing. Management should be insourced from housing associations.
    Liz Truss, for what it's worth, was a prominent supporter of planning liberalisation until she got a whiff of power and never mentioned it again. I think that the political will to upset elderly homeowners and rural voters is just not going to be there for some time. Maybe Starmer will prove me wrong.

    • @kw12784
      @kw12784 7 місяців тому

      Golf courses are private land. If the owner wants to sell it to make money, that's up to him or her. Why should they just be taken over for people to walk around...for free?

  • @user-zi8lx5fw1w
    @user-zi8lx5fw1w 10 місяців тому

    in a wfh economy, workers do not need to live near London

  • @slavmarin7827
    @slavmarin7827 10 місяців тому +2

    Thank you Neil, you are right!

  • @idunno4773
    @idunno4773 10 місяців тому

    great vid, can't believe it only has 600 views

  • @firstpostcommenter8078
    @firstpostcommenter8078 10 місяців тому

    But I thought the issue is everyone wants to live in London. Because all high paying jobs are only in London.
    It is strange that even UK's 2nd largest city Birmingham is in a long-but-possible commuting distance from London which will improve with HS2

    • @RealLifeArchitecture
      @RealLifeArchitecture  10 місяців тому

      It’s the same everywhere, not to the same degree but the undersupply of new homes affects every area of the UK. You also have displacement, where people who can’t afford to buy in expensive cities move out to smaller communities and inflate house prices such that locals are priced out

  • @Silas-lf4cc
    @Silas-lf4cc Місяць тому

    I think you're missing the point, are you a developer by any chance?.The Green Belt is there for that very reason, to provide a 'Green Belt' of land so that it's not all covered in houses. Surely if the rules are relaxed so that building houses is permitted on Green Belt land, this will just open up the floodgates for greedy, profit hungry developers everywhere!?
    The UK is the most nature depleted country in Europe, we need spaces in our urban areas for wildlife, the problem is not that we have a housing shortage, we have too many people here. Also the new houses that are built do not consider wildlife. Tiny gardens with hardly any vegetation, fencing with concrete gravel boards so that the few hedgehogs we have left can't migrate, the situation is dire! Even trees with preservation orders are cut down, the developers just pay the fines. Also the so called 'ecological surveys ' are a scam as the people carrying out the surveys are getting back-handers so turn a blind eye.
    It's all greed and profit, we should be turning derelict buildings into homes or redeveloping in grey belt land, the UK will soon just be covered in roads, houses, retail/industrial parks and agriculture, a joyless place to be

  • @johnmcmenemy3864
    @johnmcmenemy3864 10 місяців тому +2

    Housing crisis or immigration and housing policy failures?