Green Webs: Reshaping Green Belts as a route to smarter growth
Abstract
This paper calls for using green space to add value to developments rather than limit urban expansion as Green Belts have tried to do. It questions the importance of new towns as a means of providing the housing the UK needs to build and argues for urban extensions and renewal as better methods. Development corporations, as recommended by the New Towns Taskforce, should be used to implement spatial development strategies by assembling land and commissioning local infrastructure. The resulting uplift in land values can then be used to fund infrastructure improvements and new green space. A Common Wealth Fund should complement the National Wealth Fund by supporting local initiatives that conserve and improve the natural environment around town centres and railway stations. This article is also included in The Business & Management Collection which can be accessed at https://hstalks.com/business/.
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Author's Biography
Dr Nicholas Falk BA, MBA, Hon FRIBA, Hon MRTPI is an economist and urbanist who founded the not-for-profit research and consultancy group URBED (Urban and Economic Development) in 1976. He now is executive director of The URBED Trust, with projects in Southern India and Oxford. His blog Postcards from the Future and publications such as ‘Building Social Cities: Learning From What Works’ are freely available from www.urbedtrust.org along with all URBED’s past reports.