Video: What’s so good about growth? Jonathan Smales introduces the 7th William Pitt Seminar

JS Pitt Intro

In October 2012 Jonathan Smales chaired the 7th William Pitt the Younger Seminar at Pembroke College, Cambridge. The seminar sought to answer the question ‘What’s so good about growth?’ A video of Jonathan’s introduction is now available and can be viewed below, along with videos of each speaker and the subsequent discussion.

 

Jonathan Smales, Executive Chairman, Beyond Green

 

Dr Hermann Hauser, Co-founder of Amadeus Capital Partners

 

Professor Susan J Smith, Mistress of Girton College, Cambridge, Honorary Professor of Geography at Cambridge University and Adjunct Professor in the School of Global Studies at RMIT University, Melbourne

 

Andrew Hill, Associate Editor and Management Editor of the Financial Times

 

Satish Kumar


 

 

Discussion


A new movement in planning – Neil Murphy’s The New City lecture

Suburbia

This is a transcript of  Neil Murphy’s The New City lecture given on Monday 11th February 2013 at Cambridge University Department of Architecture. The New City lecture series runs until 5th March, details of upcoming lectures can be found here.

Planning is the process by which societies mediate space.  It determines what can be built where, to what purpose and under what conditions.  As last week’s session explored, the forms that human settlements take have profound implications for our environmental impacts. It is not that lives lived in dense cities are intrinsically sustainable enough or that those lived in suburbia are intrinsically otherwise, but that the propensity of people to consume energy and resources falls as their proximity to one another rises.  Conversely, there seems – up to a point – to be a positive correlation between urban density and scale and people’s propensity to be economically productive and culturally active.  Both these observations are neatly captured in David Engwicht’s observation that “[c]ities are an invention to maximise exchange (culture, goods, friendship, knowledge) and minimise travel.” i

Today I will talk about land-use planning, which is a process and a profession very much to the fore in public policy discourse in this country at present, chiefly owing to the mounting crisis caused by a failure over decades to build enough houses to meet rising demand.  I will review some of the current lines of argument in planning before setting out some ideas on how it might be re-purposed as the midwife of the New City; the former mainly in relation to this country but the latter, I hope, with a wider applicability.

I want to start by suggesting that planning is in a bit of a funk. This is illustrated by the current debate over housing delivery, in which planning is carrying the can for our social failure to build enough new houses so consistently for so long that there are several million households without suitable accommodation and even the most basic starter home is priced out of reach of many people, especially the youngii, and especially in the country’s economic hotspots.  The consensus is that the planning system is primarily, if not wholly, responsible on the grounds of, one way or another, restricting the effective supply of development land.  Beyond this basic premise, however, views diverge into two principal schools of thought.

First is a growing critique coming mainly from economists on the political leftiii.  This holds, in simple terms, that planning is not sufficiently responsive to price signals and does not allow enough development, particularly housing, in the places where market forces left alone would have it.  The result is that property prices are higher than they should be, especially in or close to areas of great economic opportunity, like the commuter belt around London, or here in Cambridge; and that many people are therefore forced to live in places or in circumstances that they do not like or that materially disadvantage them as well as, at a societal scale, stifling economic growth; a phenomenon that may be compounded rather than mitigated by the ploughing of vast public resources into regenerating northern industrial towns in the name of ‘market failure’.  Ethically, the planning system and sacred cows like Green Belt policies are seen as defending the interests of insiders at the expense of outsiders; the preservation of Home Counties landscape and property to the cost of the migratory poor.  From this perspective, the primary challenge to planning is to let more development go where developers want to put it, and to tax the profits for progressive ends.

The critique from the right, given voice by some in the present government, is more focused on the perceived qualitative failings of planning.  Too much emphasis in the planning system on targets for building set nationally or regionally; policy prescription on matters such as development density, social mixing and car parking restraint; and too much “pig ugly” development in the words of the present planning ministeriv have made people resistant to development near where they live.  Localise planning choice, these critics say; allow people more influence over the nature and form of development – and even bribe them with a share of the proceedsv – and consent for building will follow.

There are problems with both these versions of events, but I shall focus briefly on the former because it presents a clearer intellectual challenge to planning and a more direct and, arguably, honest attempt to tackle the underlying problem of supply.  Although I personally think there should be more use of economics in planning, it is important not to over-emphasise planning restraints on land supply as a cause of stunted growth.  We need to consider patterns of land ownership in many parts of the country that make it especially easy and attractive for landowners to seek rents from speculation, aided by an almost non-existent system of property taxation; and the role of the volume housebuilding industry, the dominance by a few big firms and ‘current trader’ business model of which stifles innovation and diversity and make supply much more vulnerable to economic fluctuations than it needs to be – something I shall return to shortly.  Equal concern should attach to our failure to price transport, especially roads, properly such that there is effectively a subsidy to sprawl.  And we need to better understand why the market under-values in the short-term spatial qualities that could add economic value in the long-term, such as compactness and permeability, which planning is, in theory, well-placed to obtain.   In other words, we have to look not just at how to use more land but how to use it more efficiently.

But these quite different critiques both, in the end, reflect a wider societal scepticism about the value and efficacy of professional planning, and a resurgent faith in the market to do a better job of allocating land resources, with planners cast as the regulators.  Although some would argue that the marketisation of land-use has not yet gone nearly far enough, it has been extended by recent reforms.  When the draft National Planning Policy Framework was published in 2011, the Royal Town Planning Institute, the professional body for planners, complained that it “fail[ed] to set out a vision” and was focused on a “response to market demands rather than… truly sustainable development”vi.  But, for all the professionals’ wailing, it became government policy all the same.

In 1990, Mark Tewdwr-Jones wrote that:

“Planning has been reduced to a bureaucratic regulatory process in which the political has been down played in the interests of organisational efficiency.  The “vision thing”, the concept that gave birth to town planning as a professional activity in the early years of the twentieth century, has been lost, partly as a consequence of legislative fiat, a New Right determination to standardise and commodify planning as a public service, and individual planners’ recalcitrance.  Town planning is no longer a political and professional activity; it is rampant technocracy, shared between public and private sectors.”vii

One can see the current discourse as evidence that a problem described over 20 years ago has reached its apogee.  How did this come to pass? Tewdwr-Jones hints at the role played by a political ideology antipathetic to the very idea of vision, but I would highlight three other factors lying deep in the psyche of planning at play.

First, the fact that town planning as an ideal and a profession first found its voice in advocacy of garden cities and a theorisation of the English romance with villages, small towns and countryside meant that it was always vulnerable to the perversion of its ideals by forces that drew on the folk wisdom of garden cities as idealised environments, and turned what was essentially a truth about collective prosperity into an illusion about personal choice.  One such force was the car, and I will let Bruce deal with that.  Another was the volume housebuilder.  Housebuilders have a highly evolved narrative in which whatever they provide is what the market wants, is aspirational, and any failings are beyond their control.  Take this from Nick Rogers, design director of Taylor Wimpey, in response to the planning ministers Nick Boles’s accusation that developers are “lazy”:

“We build homes that people want to buy and create places that people want to live in… No one sets out to design bad buildings or places, but sometimes things happen to prevent a good outcome. This certainly happened pre-crash when the combination of high demand, lack of developable land and government policy, drove density of development to a level where, sometimes, the result was poor design.”viii

As I have mentioned already, housebuilding has many of the characteristics of an oligopoly: a market dominated by a small number of large firms.  And the truth is that, like all oligopolists, housebuilders do not necessarily build what a truly competitive market would want but what it is expedient to produce.  Except on the odd ‘flagship’ project where they make a show of doing something a bit different, theirs is a mass market model of increasingly standardised designs arranged in identikit inward-looking layouts, usually with an assumption if not an outright requirement of car ownership. Because they typically finance construction with expensive short-term debt, national housebuilders are beholden to the ability to sell what they build quickly to owner-occupiers such that a house becomes ‘product’, not an enduring asset and still less an element of ‘town’.  When, as now, low wages and a shortage of mortgage finance silts up the demand, supply halts.  This process embodies the reduction of human habitat to the tiniest range of possibilities, with the result that nearly a third of people, according to a study by the RIBA, would consider buying a house build in the last ten years only as a last resort.ix

As Sir Peter Hall has put it:

“this is not an argument against suburbs, but against a particularly kind of proto-suburban development loved by the housebuilders: low density houses on the edges of a small town somewhere in southern England, clustered into a cul-de-sac, giving onto a distribution road, which all too easily gets gridlocked, and it does not produce anything like a decent bus service.”x

Yet the appropriation by housebuilders of the language of suburban aspiration, combined with their dominance of the land market, has cowed planners to such an extent that strategic planning in many places has been reduced to refereeing between one ‘stunning development’ in a field on the edge of town, or another.  The way that the planning system understands viability has been skewed to the housebuilder model, with planners under growing pressure to subjugate the long term needs of infrastructure and social housing in their areas in order to bail out the builders’ silted-up model of rapid debt-driven turnover.  What we are seeing is a spatial form of Eisenhower’s “military-industrial complex”, the subjugation of mediation in the public interest to the interests of producers.  (What is profoundly ironic about this, incidentally, is that the modern planning profession and culture for all its rhetoric about placemaking would struggle to allow something as bold and beautiful as Edinburgh New Town or Georgian Bath to be built in the countryside.  It would be seen as overdevelopment, too dense and insufficiently respectful of its ‘setting’, its streets failing to meet adoptable highways standards and its parking provision recklessly out of kilter with the needs of the modern families.)

Second, when visionary planning returned to our great cities in the postwar period it did so at a difficult time.  In my own home city of Newcastle upon Tyne the great period of visionary planning in the 20th century under T. Dan Smith coincided with the relatively brief period in which the Corbusian ideal of the ville radieuse gained popular traction over municipal housing design and the progressive planning wisdom became that cities must be comprehensively re-planned to accommodate the motor vehicle in the city, through the building of urban motorways and the segregation of people and traffic.  The mythology, not to mention the grim legacy infrastructure, of that era bears a heavy responsibility for the antipathy of many people today to ‘visionary’ municipal leadership and their scorn and cynicism towards planning as a social institution.  People forget that, in the same city, it was the incredibly bold collaboration – some might say collusion – between city planners and the single-minded developer Richard Grainger that created the Georgian wonder that is Grainger town and arguably England’s finest neoclassical street. Oh, for some of that particular kind of planning arrogance today.

Third, planning always had a problem managing the innate complexity of urbanism, so, over time, became accustomed to managing it out.  This was Jane Jacobs’s great criticism of planning: well-founded concerns about sanitary conditions in late 19th Century industrial cities that became misdirected as an assault on the qualities of density and intricate mixes of uses that made cities engines of economic output and social life, to be replaced by the “marvels of dullness”xi she saw the rise of zoning and a preoccupation with landscape bringing to bear.  Jacobs’s Death and Life of Great American Cities remains a revered text among planners, but the spatial expression of economic intent in our cities today is not the mixed-use neighbourhood with its close-grained interplay of activity but the landscaped business park: gleaming sheds in fields of car parking.   At the very least, these strange forms reflect the triumph in planning of short-term cost-driven business interests over long-term value-based economic ones: today’s wish for cheap rents, compliant workers and easy commutes made possible at the cost of tomorrow’s dense interplay of urban life, its ability to sustain ‘different freedoms’ and its propensity to innovate in the space between buildings.  But one might go further and agree with Tom McDonagh, who writes that

“modern capitalism, the bureaucratic society of consumption, is here and there beginning to shape its own setting. This society… is building the terrain that accurately represents it, combining the conditions most suitable for its proper functioning, while at the same time translating in space, in the clear language of organization of everyday life, its fundamental principle of alienation and constraint.”xii

So where do we go from here?

What seems clear is that planning has confused ends and means: mediation of space has become the objective, without any clear sense of the ends that mediation is trying to achieve. In the middle of the road, you get knocked over.  The logical outcome of this malaise is a continued shift towards ever more market-led approaches to land use that might eventually fix our housing shortage but which will under-provide cogent settlement patterns and discount too heavily the factors that will make places competitive, sustainable and socially just in the long-run.

Instead, I’d like to suggest a different scenario, one that gives planning its mojo back and invites a new era of planning visionaries to step up and confront the needs of the New City.  (I know that arguing for more power for planners in a room full of architects is unlikely to go down well, but bear with me.)

First, we need more and smarter planning, not less.  We need to vex less about the shortage of land and more about the shortage of good urban places that foster exchange, human contact and create long-term economic and social possibilities rather than restricting development to a narrow interpretation of present day needs and norms.

Specifically, we need to plan and re-plan our settlements in coherent units of compact, walkable, mixed-use urbanism.  Paul Murrain is likely to discuss this in detail next week, so rather than going into what these units are let me instead focus on the planning implications.  Chiefly, it means that we will no longer think of meeting housing needs in terms of fifty or a hundred homes in the next field, but in how we create and support well-resolved, well-served and well-connected mixed-use neighbourhoods of two thousand or more homes.  The precise spatial, connective and urbanistic strategy will depend on the situation, but this is a principle that works equally well in dense urban contexts, the outward growth of existing settlements and brand new places whether urban or suburban.  The rules that attach to these places will not be governing minimum car parking and the separation of uses but such things as the permeability of space, the accessibility of everyday human needs and the importance of street, block and plot to urban coherence and adaptability.

Within this there is certainly a place for substantial new settlements in areas of high aggregate demand.  It is simply not tenable to think that the housing needs of the London megaregion, for example, can be met wholly within existing urban boundaries or in the relatively few places where there is neither profound social and political antipathy to development nor planning-imposed constraints like green belt.  What matters is that, where such settlements are planned, they justify their existence by replacing cherished landscape with efficient, well-functioning and beautiful townscape.

But we need a differentiated approach for places whose long-run trajectory is more stable or declining, bearing in mind that a radical increase in supply in areas such as the greater south-east is likely to exacerbate the fragility of population trends in these areas.  In our former industrial towns and cities there is, it seems to me, a long-term strategic choice to be made. On the one hand there is compactness, proximity and the reuse of land and infrastructure; the urban footprint managed to best create the productive urban conditions that come with density and urban connectivity in the hope that our cities can create from their own bases of knowledge and creativity the self-sustaining, value-driven economy – the ideopolis – of the future. On the other, more of our present civic diffidence perpetuating the market-driven flight to the periphery and locking our cities further into a model of cost-driven competition.

Second, to support this spatially-driven model we need a new understanding of the physical forms and typologies that can produce superb, highly-functioning urbanism while meeting the needs and expectations of households and businesses, transforming the present antagonism between public and private interests and realms into symbiosis.  What are the housing forms that can deliver spacious family homes and a desire for a garden at 50, 60 dwellings to the hectare or more while making wonderful townscape? How do we integrate workplaces large and small and reconcile the outward-facing needs of companies in an urbanism that values face-to-face contact and exchange as the basis of long-term economic wellbeing? Over to you architects…

Third, as a logical corollary of this truly spatial approach to planning I personally think – and I emphasise these views are mine and not those of my employer – we need a revolution in the way that land is treated, one that sees it primarily not as a private asset but as a common and wholly finite resource, discourages speculative rent-seeking by landowners, helps to break the short-termist housebuilder model’s stranglehold on supply and enables development to go in the right place rather than where the field boundary happens to be.  In simple terms, planning authorities, not landowners, should decide what land is required to achieve cogent units of urbanism and have the right to acquire that land for compensation equivalent to no more than its current use value.  And they should become progressive town-builders, the Richard Graingers of our age, their curation of the land in the public interest giving them an in-built incentive to demand a whole-life, whole society approach to the use of land and to orchestrate urban designers, architects, engineers and the multiplicity of statutory agencies and interest groups that operate in urban space to produce urbanism capable of adapting to changing economic and social forces and getting better with age.

Finally, we need our planners to rediscover a role as educators and promoters of a social understanding of space.  Indeed, if none of the other possibilities come to pass – and who would bet on any political leader showing the vision and leadership to tackle vested interests in land dating back to the Domesday book? – we need this more than anything.  Planners have to be the ones who will point out to people who want an eighth of an acre for their house or endless free parking outside their office what would happen to our cities, our lives, our planet if everyone wanted that and got it.  Land, space and wonderful environments are collective goods – and that is why the New City needs a new movement in planning.



i Engwicht, Towards an Eco-City

ii See for example National Housing Federation, Home Truths 2011

iii See for example Cheshire, Urban Containment, Housing Affordability and Price Stability – Irreconcilable Goals, SERC 2009

iv “Boles criticises ‘pig ugly’ housing scheme”, www.planningresource.co.uk, accessed 10th February 2013

v “Communities to be given cash to back development”, www.insidehousing.co.uk, accessed 10th February 2013

vi “Draft NPPF a ‘missed opportunity’ says RTPI”, www.planningresource.co.uk, accessed 9th February 2012

vii Mark Tewdwr-Jones, 1999, quoted in Peter Hall, Cities of Tomorrow.

viii Via www.taylorwimpey.co.uk, accessed 9th February 2013

ix RIBA The Case for Space.  31% of people would not consider buying a home built in the last ten years, or would only consider it as a last resort.

x Sir Peter Hall, lecture to AiH Estate of the Nation conference, 24th May 2000

xi Jacobs, Death and Life of Great American Cities

xii McDonagh, Situationists and the City


The New City lecture series

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To launch The Urgent Remarkable we’re holding a series of lectures at Cambridge University Department of Architecture, under the heading The New City.

The lectures will examine how our cities can be re-made in ways that will both inspire and enable all to live well – safely, healthily, prosperously, with pleasure and freedom – and within tightly bounded environmental limits.

All lectures are open to the public and will start at 4pm in Lecture Theatre One at the Department of Architecture, 1-5 Scroope Terrace, Cambridge, CB2 1PX. No registration is necessary. Full details can be found here (pdf).

4th February

  • Way beyond Smart: the case for Remarkable Cities (Jonathan Smales, Executive Chairman, Beyond Green)
  • How shall we live? (Joanna Yarrow, Founding Director, Beyond Green)

11th February

  • A new movement? (Neil Murphy, Director Policy, Planning & Economics & Bruce McVean, Integrated Design Manger, Beyond Green)

18th February

  • Urban form for remarkable cities (Paul Murrain, urban designer and landscape architect)

25th February

  • Remarkable construction (Chris Whitehead, International Head of Sustainability, Balfour Beatty)

4th March

 


Introducing ‘The Urgent Remarkable’

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This post is written by Jonathan Smales, Executive Chairman of Beyond Green.

We’re all sustainable now aren’t we? Perhaps not, but we all know about sustainability. How could we not? Sustainability and its offspring – resilience, durability, ‘zero carbon’, ‘green’, ‘eco’ everything – are ubiquitous. We have sustainable Olympics, codes for sustainable homes and buildings, sustainable schools, sustainable procurement (when we just keep on procuring?!), sustainable energy, sustainable cars, sustainable economies and industries, whole cities dedicated to the concept; we even have sustainable summitry.  We’re awash with it.

Has this overfamiliarity with the term bred laziness? Are we beguiled into thinking that just because we use the word so often we’ve dropped the bad habits of an unsustainable world?

I’ve certainly done my own share of sustainability punditry… With the best of intentions I was MD of Greenpeace UK, founded the Earth Centre, commissioned several significant green buildings and advised the Mayor of Hanover on the 2000 World EXPO. With a desire to up the ante on applied sustainability I co-founded Beyond Green in 2001. We’ve written sustainable development strategies for the Housing Corporation and CABE, founded the government’s programme on the public understanding of climate change, advised the City of Manchester on its climate change action plan, been a lead adviser on several major city and urban extensions & had a sustainability hand in the three largest real estate and regeneration projects in London.

When Beyond Green hit its 10th anniversary I began asking myself what lessons could be learned from these practical and applied projects. The conclusion was that the fundamental problem is in city strategy, planning, design, real estate, investment, infrastructure and design we’re still working in a system based on false assumptions. We’re collectively still not facing up to the magnitude or speed of change that’s needed. There’s a fundamental dissonance between what’s being done in the name of sustainability and the nature and scale of the challenges we should be addressing – as well as the opportunities that potentially lie in taking bold action.

In his seminal book Good Strategy/Bad Strategy Richard Rumelt argues that good strategy is “not just deciding what to do, but (is properly concerned with) the more fundamental problem of comprehending the situation”. Good strategies have a diagnosis, a guiding policy and coherent action. 

Sadly it seems that for ‘sustainability’ in the hands of most there’s no accurate or cogent diagnosis of the situation we’re in. Without this how can we formulate appropriate guiding policy or coherent actions? Little of what we do is integrated and fit for purpose.

What does ‘zero carbon’ really mean? In relation to what? Why is it important? When is a building or a transport strategy or a neighbourhood sufficiently sustainable given global megatrends such as rapid population growth, the Westernisation of consumption habits and lifestyles or escalating climate change? How many car journeys (electric or otherwise) or plane journeys can a world of 9 billion support? Can everyone eat a high meat-protein diet and use water as recklessly as we do in Britain? In Thomas L. Friedman’s words the world really is suddenly, ‘hot, flat and crowded’.  We urgently need to live differently – within environmental limits.

In Beyond Green most of our work is in one way or another connected with cities. Our strapline is, How shall we live?’ and we’re primarily concerned with how cities (now our principal human habitat) can be remade in ways that will inspire and enable all to live well that is, safely, healthily, actively, with pleasure, civility, tolerance and freedom – all within tightly bounded environmental limits.

The New City: What city infrastructure does this? Which ways of getting around, what type of real estate, which designs, what architecture, streets and other public realm could make this way of life possible? If 2050 is a tipping point how can we finance the rapid transformation of all world cities in the next crucial 37 years? Which economic models and investment strategies will work best? How can we make the necessary changes affordable and which versions of whole-life economics will do the job? How should we communicate with and engage people in these changes? What brand values should we espouse?  Which political policies and programmes should we create or support? And where do we look for inspiration in this cacophonous world?

Could there be any upside to getting this right? And what if there were a growing body of evidence that the cities that are already making these changes were becoming safer, more liveable, easier to move around in, that they were attracting disproportionate amounts of human talent, were more successful economically, were cleaner and more equitable? Wouldn’t that be remarkable?

With all this in mind at Beyond Green we’re working on a new world view regarding how we might live well (and that means sustainably) in the future and how we might transform cities to enable us to do so. We’re calling it the urgent remarkable. Urgent because of the unremitting global challenges we face and the need for an accurate and cogent diagnosis. Remarkable because global society must move remarkably quickly and boldly to address the challenges and seize the opportunities; and as we make the breakthrough changes to city fabric and city living we (hope) we’ll discover how remarkably well it all works.

The urgent remarkable world-view is being launched via a series of lectures at Cambridge University School of Architecture in February and March 2013 under the heading, The New City.

This will be followed by an international Summer School at Pembroke College in 2014 aimed at leaders from different sectors and disciplines from cities around the world.


Candlelit Dinner with Tony Juniper at Wilderness Wood, Saturday 5th January

Tony Juniper book cover

On the first Saturday of each month through 2013 our sister company Wilderness Wood is hosting candlelit dinners served in their beautiful timber-frame Barn.

On Saturday 5th January they we’ll be joined by acclaimed environmentalist Tony Juniper who will be introducing his new book What has Nature ever done for us? (released Jan 10th; signed copies on sale at the dinner).

Full details are available here.

Tony is an independent sustainability & environment adviser, including as Special Advisor with the Prince’s Charities International Sustainability Unit & as a Senior Associate with the University of Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership. He’s a founder member of the Robertsbridge Group that advises international companies. He speaks & writes on many aspects of sustainability & is the author of several books, including the award-winning Parrots of the WorldSpix’s Macaw & How Many Light Bulbs Does It Take To Change A Planet? He was a co-author of Harmony, with HRH The Prince of Wales & Ian Skelly.

Tony began his career as an ornithologist, working with Birdlife International. From 1990 he worked at Friends of the Earth; he was the organisation’s executive director from 2003-2008 & was Vice Chair of Friends of the Earth International 2000-2008.


The London Climate Forum 2012

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The London Climate Forum 2012 – the UK’s biggest student-led conference on climate change and sustainability – is taking place this weekend at Imperial College. The speaker line up is impressive to say the least and given that line up tickets are a bargain.

Beyond Green’s Bruce McVean will be taking part in a panel discussion on Intelligent Cities and Sustainable Buildings on Sunday afternoon alongside Richard Jackson, Head of environmental sustainability, UCL and Kirk Shanks, Lecturer & Academic Manager, London-Loughborough (LoLo) Centre for doctoral research in Energy Demand.

Bruce’s opening remarks will focus on the role of place in enabling low carbon lifetsyles and the need for policies and projects that allow cities to thrive, rather than just survive, in the face of the multiple challenges presented by a changing climate.


Press release: NS&OC Outline Planning Application submitted today

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Following presentation of proposals at public exhibitions on 6th and 7th October, Beyond Green have today submitted an Outline Planning Application for North Sprowston and Old Catton (NS&OC).

Proposals include:

  • up to 3,520 homes of mixed size, tenure and type including up to 33% ‘affordable’ homes;
  • up to 16,800m² of business and employment space including adaptable office buildings, incubators, workshops and studios for small businesses and start-ups and an enterprise ‘hub’ supporting micro-companies and homeworkers – creating 1,000 local jobs by the time the development is completed;
  • up to 8,800m² of retail and services development providing for shops, banks, cafés, restaurants, pubs and other essential local services to meet local people’s daily needs in a traditional high street setting;
  • sites for two new primary schools and up to 2,000m² of community space including two community halls, a health centre and library;
  • up to 1,000m² for up to two small hotels or guesthouses;
  • easy access to public transport and streets designed to make walking and cycling the most convenient modes of transport;
  • over 80 hectares of green space including a major new public park at Beeston Park, three recreation grounds, allotments and community gardens, with 40% of the site, not including private gardens, becoming accessible green space; and
  • a very low-carbon decentralised energy network, plus infrastructure to manage water resources sustainably.

Jonathan Smales, Executive Chairman of the Beyond Green Group, said “we’re delighted to be submitting this outline planning application for a superb new extension to Sprowton and Old Catton. If the proposals in this application are granted consent, we want to work with people in Broadland to deliver a place that helps us to achieve the highest quality of life with the lowest environmental footprint.

“Future residents will enjoy a range of housing types and tenures that are affordable to local people; a stunning park consisting of the restored historic landscape of Beeston Park (currently inaccessible, privately-farmed arable fields) with Red Hall Farm; two new primary schools and community spaces; and a place where it will be easiest as well as most pleasant to move around for everyday journeys on foot and by bicycle.

“We have been greatly encouraged by the way in which people in Broadland have been prepared to commit their expertise, local knowledge and time to working with us to explore opportunities for NS&OC. We had a great turnout at the exhibitions last week, with over 230 members of the public and over 70 stakeholders attending the events. This input will continue to be invaluable should this project proceed; now that the application has been submitted we will renew our efforts to engage and involve, looking for people to input into proposals and for those who want to become actively involved in the delivery of this development.”

Beyond Green’s application will be considered by Broadland District Council in the context of the Joint Core Strategy (JCS) for Broadland, Norwich and South Norfolk, adopted in March 2011, which provides for the development of 33,000 homes within the ‘Norwich Policy Area’ between 2008 and 2026.

The application site is within the Broadland ‘Growth Triangle’ proposed for at least 7,000 dwellings by 2026 rising to at least 10,000 after 2026. In February 2012 following a legal challenge the High Court remitted policies relating to the Growth Triangle for further consultation and sustainability appraisal, and revised draft policies are currently undergoing public consultation.  Reflecting the importance of the plan-making process, Beyond Green has requested that Broadland District Council does not determine the planning application until the outcome of this further work is clear and the JCS is re-adopted, probably in spring 2013.

The full NS&OC Outline Planning Application including technical appendices can be viewed on the Beyond Green website. Once the application has been validated by Broadland District Council, they will conduct a formal consultation inviting comments on the proposals, which will be available on their website (www.broadland.gov.uk) and to view in person at the Broadland District Council offices and at Sprowston Diamond Centre. Beyond Green hope that as many people as possible will provide their comments; we welcome all comments, positive and negative, and are keen to see as many viewpoints as possible represented in the response.

Further details can be found in the Notes to Editors accompanying this press release. If you would like to receive updates on NS&OC, please email nsoc@beyondgreen.co.uk asking to be added to our mailing list.


What’s so good about growth?

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In his introduction to Pembroke College’s William Pitt the Younger Seminar Beyond Green’s Executive Chairman Jonathan Smales asks, ‘What’s so good about growth?’

In his biography of William Pitt the younger, William Hague wrote, “The population of England grew from 5.5 million to 7 million between 1751 and 1781….the growth of the cotton industry and trade with the expanding Empire provided new employment on a huge scale…The unprecedented expansion and movements of population would create immense political and social strains…but at the time of Pitt’s Cambridge education these trends had yet to gather their full momentum.”

Well, a lot has changed since Pitt’s day. The population of the United Kingdom will probably reach 70 million by 2030; the global population has grown from an estimated 300 million in Pitt’s time to more than 7 billion today.

And that’s about 5 billion consumers, each with varying degrees of profound, or in the words of Thomas Homer Dixon tectonic impact on the biosphere with massive and growing carbon and wider environmental footprints. The carbon footprint of a Tanzanian is about 0.06 tons of carbon; the average Australian, currently pretty much world-beaters on this score, emits 27 tons into the atmosphere every year – about 400x more!

It is not unlikely that the world’s population will grow to over 9 billion by 2050. And if over the same period global economic growth were to continue to average 2.5% the compound effect of population increase and economic growth on the world’s environment would be c.10x greater in 2050 than it was in 2000 – the so-called Factor 10.

The maths are unremitting. The value of the global economy has grown from $30billion to $69billion since 2000.  In 2011 China became the world’s biggest market for new car sales with 13.8million cars sold. But if it ever reached American levels of car ownership – some would say when it reaches American levels of car ownership – there would be another 900 million cars on the world’s roads.

And yet, growth has seemed to many an unequivocally good thing.

That growth is good is a truth, a mantra a shibboleth. We are starry-eyed about it. Hope springs eternal when growth is fast, continuous and cumulative. According to authoritative reports, hundreds of millions of people have been ‘lifted out of poverty’ by growth. Today, party politics is dominated, even perhaps overshadowed by growth.  ‘It’s the economy stupid’.

The main parties differ only over the method of its delivery. We grow faster either via Ed Miliband’s One Nation ‘responsible capitalism’– or George Osborne’s less trammeled, free-market capitalism. But the primary purpose – growth – is unchanged.

And greener growth – sustainable development – as Gro Harlem Brundtland christened it in 1987, is claimed by both ideologies. Don’t we need growth to ‘pay for’ environmental infrastructure, green technology and the restoration of habitat – even if only to remediate the damage caused by the last round of growth?

Whatever our backgrounds and, it would seem, whatever our political allegiance, growth is the one thing we can agree on. Or can we?

Is a certain type of growth simply a lie? Are we now paying, quite literally, for a previous era of false growth, an era that may yet bankrupt us? And what about growing inequality?  How might businesses in the future and of the future grow in truly sustainable ways? Do fast-growth economies make us happy or unwell? Is the seemingly perpetual pursuit of more an inherently fulfilling experience or a fundamentally discomfiting experience?

Here’s Hanif Kureishi on the subject, “I never understood the elevation of greed as a political credo. Why would anyone want to base a political programme on bottomless dissatisfaction and the impossibility of happiness.”

Harvard economist, Michael Sandel says that if he ruled the world he would ‘have a bigger goal in view’, that is “to loosen the hold that economic reasoning exerts on the public mind, and on our moral and political imagination.”

And when we’ve rehearsed some of these ideas and arguments, if we were to agree that growth per se is not a panacea for economies or the Holy Grail of politics, then what is?  What might replace it and how will we sell that to ourselves and everyone else? After the economic crash of 1847 the poet Matthew Arnold wrote of the feeling of, “wandering between worlds, one dead the other powerless to be born…”

Sounds familiar.


Jonathan Smales chairs annual William Pitt the Younger seminar

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Beyond Green’s Executive Chairman, Jonathan Smales, will today chair the annual William Pitt the Younger seminar at Pembroke College, Cambridge. The title of the event is, ‘What’s so good about growth?’. There will be four speakers: Andrew Hill from the Financial Times,  Human Geographer Prof. Susan Smith from Girton College, former monk, Satish Kumar of Resurgence and the Ecologist and a teacher of voluntary simplicity, and IT entrepreneur, government adviser and founder of Amadeus Capital Partners, Dr Hermann Hauser.

It’s a great and, of course, very topical theme for such a seminar. Growth has become a mantra, an idea that towers over politics, left and right; unequivocally a ‘good thing’. ‘It’s the economy stupid!’

But is all growth equal? Do we want it at any cost? What kind of growth best reconciles human needs and well-being with increasingly challenging environmental constraints? Is there such a thing as transformative growth – that which enable us to move rapidly or more rapidly towards a truly sustainable economy and/or, say, built environment?

Jonathan will blog about the seminar next week.


Invitation to view NS&OC Outline Planning Application

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Beyond Green are pleased to announce that we will soon be submitting an Outline Planning Application for our project in North Sprowston and Old Catton (‘NS&OC’).

We’ve spent over two years developing proposals and plans with local residents and stakeholders. We’ve sought to design a place which not only delivers much needed new housing, jobs and social infrastructure but in which people will be able to enjoy a superb lifestyle with wonderful green spaces and easy access to good schools, shops, and the attractions of the city and the Norfolk countryside. All coupled with a very low environmental footprint.

Our proposals for NS&OC include:

  • up to 3,520 new homes of different sizes and types, including up to one third ‘affordable’ homes;
  • new spaces for business enabling over 1,000 jobs to be created on-site;
  • two new primary schools, a health centre, library and community halls;
  • shops and services to meet local people’s daily needs in a traditional high street setting;
  • over 80 hectares of green space including a major new public park at Beeston Park, three recreation grounds, allotments and community gardens;
  • easy access to public transport and streets designed to make walking and cycling the most convenient modes of transport;
  • a very-low-carbon decentralised energy network, plus infrastructure to manage water resources sustainably.

On Saturday 6th and Sunday 7th October we’re holding a weekend of public exhibitions at Sprowston Diamond Centre (map here) to view the Outline Planning Application for NS&OC and discuss proposals with the Beyond Green team. If you live or work nearby we do hope you’ll be able to join us. For more details please see our public invitation (PDF).

Once submitted the full Outline Planning Application will be available on the website – watch this space for details.