Re/Shaping London Unlocking Sustainable Growth in West London and Beyond

Authors:

Jonathan Manns and Dr Nicholas Falk

Published in:

The London Society and the All Party Parliamentary Group for London’s Planning and Built Environment

Date:

October 2016

Themes:

Economic growth and land management

Environment and sustainability

Housing and community

Locations:

Summary:

This report considers a handful of ways in which London can be shaped and re-shaped in response to the challenges of climate change, EU exit and pressures on tolerance, ambition and fairness.

Ask a question of this publication

We've trained our AI on this publication, so it can answer questions relevant to your area of interest. Try asking it a question, such as:

Ask a question above to see the response here

Disclaimer: The answers provided are generated by machine inspired by the content of this publication, but may incorporate extraneous or inaccurate information. Please use your discretion and caution when interpreting these answers.

London needs to ‘shape up’ if it is to retain a dominant position as both a World City and one that is truly sustainable. Ensuring that London delivers the quality of development required to remain at the world’s top-table is the joint responsibility of the Mayor and the Boroughs. There is a clear aspiration to deliver both new homes and jobs, but fresh decisions need to be made in the face of unpredictable pressures such as a seemingly inevitable departure from the European Union and global climate change. More than ever, London needs to position itself as a city of aspiration and tolerance, ambition and fairness.

This report considers a handful of ways in which London can be shaped and re-shaped in response to these challenges. In doing so, it proposes some basic principles to inform future development considerations; not only in the planning of new places, but the densification and regeneration of those which already exist. It seeks to explore ways in which this ‘re/shaping’ might be achieved and then demonstrate how some of the ideas might be applied in West London; significantly increasing the area’s anticipated development potential. It all starts from the simple premise that we must plan, we must enable and we must build.