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Build Communities, not just housing estates
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I would suggest creating Community Land Trust for all new developments |
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Download this information as .pdf 'Click Here' |
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| * A trust can build homes much cheaper
and offer the land owner a good deal. |
| * The deal could be that each home nets
the land owner £5,000 per home build plus ground rent of £200 per home,
per annum. |
| * Local
Councils should be finding suitable sites and inviting developers
to tender for building what is needed, rather than developers submitting
applications for what they want to sell. |
| * Currently building land can cost up to
£500,000 an acre, clearly this is far too high for low cost housing—it
should be limited to £100,000 an acre. |
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| A design as per page 1 could be built 4
or 5 floors high on new developments, housing a large number of families
in one community. New developments need to include
vertical growing areas for fresh vegetables to feed residents, utilising
rainwater harvesting for their irrigation. Solar panels would help power
to run buildings. There should be recreation areas, sport areas and
natural habitats for protecting wildlife. This style of development
encourages intergenerational living, increasing everyone's health
and well-being, which in turn reduces mental health issues, obesity and
diabetes. A child care facility along with an elderly care setting should
be within the complex to encourage a reduction in travel needs for already
busy lifestyles. There should also be office space for
suitable businesses and light industry units close to the homes but far
enough away so as not to become too noisy, and saving congestion. The Government believes the way forward
is more people renting homes, but, rents never end. When those paying rent
retire, their pensions won’t cover the rents, especially private rents.
The state will be paying out billions in housing benefits. One should not
have to pay a mortgage or rent after one becomes pensionable age, and that
that should not be beyond 66 years. Developers have a lot to answer for
regarding the issues we are now experiencing. I would recommend cap development land
equivalent to 100 years from farming each acre of land. Build homes as in
the style above, using British steel as a frame off ground to save
flooding, with module homes they could be sold at cost, while only being
sold back to the Community Land Trust, not onto the market. Much of our aging populations loneliness
and the younger generation’s antisocial behaviour stems from poor
housing estate design and lack of affordability. Young people coming out of Care often
become homeless. New developments should include a place where children in
the care system could be housed and brought up in family
environments/assisted living until they become adults, rather than being
bounced around several different foster homes. This saves moving several
times and becoming a generation of of people who have no one as real a
guardian. These young people would become better adults, having a sense of
belonging. |
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| The Government 10 Year
Health plan released earlier this summer sets out an ambitious vision to
being care closer to local Communities. It
promises a network of integrated neighbourhoods services to create an NHS
fit for the future. But updating healthcare facilities alone isn’t
enough - a holistic approach to health must involve the private as well as
public sector. |
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| Thoughtful
housing design at an early stage can shape places that nurture health,
strengthen social connection and reduce pressure on the NHS, argues Chris
Scott.
Chris Scott is Development Director & ESG Lead, Southern Team
of Muse Development. Chris Scott is reported to have written: Developers have their role to play and
must now rise to the challenge of designing housing that actively promotes
health and well-being. Our homes are where we spend the vast
majority of our time, shaping how we live, work and travel. In doing so,
they profoundly influence our health. When designing thoughtfully, new
homes can encourage healthier lifestyles and reduce pressure on the NHS.
For developers, two of the biggest opportunities lie in better
connectivity and access to safe welcoming green spaces. Health driven infrastructure. Physical inactivity costs the NHS an
estimated £900 million every year. The most forward thinking developers
are already placing health at the centre of place-making, starting with
infrastructure. Well-connected sites with high-quality walking and cycling
routes enable seamless active travel, helping residents weave healthy
habits into daily life. Providing supporting infrastructure can also boost
property values and streamline the planning process, with policy
frameworks favouring well-connected sustainable sites. Developers must look beyond their
red-line boundaries. The health of a place is shaped as much by it’s
connections to surrounding infrastructure as by what lies within it’s
footprint. Ensuring residents can walk, wheel and
cycle to schools, healthcare Facilities, workplaces and transport hubs
requires collaboration with local authorities, infrastructure providers
and community organisations. Great place-making is holistic: it interlinks
homes, amenities and mobility into a single cohesive ecosystem. Everyday access to greenery—whenever
through tree-lined streets, pocket parks, private balconies or views of
rovers or canals—can deliver mental and health benefits. Successful schemes
weave nature throughout the built environment, treating it not as an
optional extra but as an essential feature of urban living. |
| Designing
health into the public realm must remain a priority. The long-term payoffs
to communities and the NHS are immense. If green spaces feel unsafe, they will
go unused, particularly by women, older adults and those with mobility
challenges. Developers can address this by creating environments that feel
welcoming and secure. |
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