Brooklyn Re-development Deathmatch August 19, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in America, Design, Planning, Regeneration.add a comment
Over at Environmental and Urban Economics, Matthew E. Kahn links to a New York magazine article describing the controversy over the proposed ‘Atlantic Yards‘ development in Brooklyn. While the scale of the proposed development is vast, the politics are not so dissimilar to arguments over countless much smaller schemes. For example, the article author Chris Smith notes how the development’s promoter “manages to use the phrase “affordable housing” five times in two minutes. Not once does he mention the 4,610 market-rate (unaffordable?) apartments and condos to be built”. And the concerns are about massing, blocked views, “intersections choked with traffic [and] More kids than the local schools can possibly handle”.
Matthew seems a little sceptical about the concerns being expressed:
This looks like a classic case of public choice and heterogeneity. People will disagree over whether this project is good or bad. Mancur Olson would say that a small cohesive pressure group that loses the most from doing the project (i.e white upper middle class hipsters who already live in the community) have the greatest incentive to lobby against it. It will be interesting if the “silent majority” can launch a counter-attack. This Ratner looks quite well politically connected .
The last point is important, because a small cohesive group that has the most to win from doing the project can be very persuasive too while being no more representative of the greater good. In my view, there will always be enormous disagreements over a development like this, because once it’s built there will be no going back for decades at least, and if it goes wrong it could spoil a huge swathe of Brooklyn. The temptation is always to avoid the risk by saying no, but done well a large-scale redevelopment of this kind can transform a whole city for the better. All of which is a long-winded way of saying that it comes down to whether the details are right. And from first glance I’m not sure they are: why must the proposed buildings be so massively out of scale with their surroundings? Why does a development involving several thousand luxury flats and vast office space require over a billion dollars in public subsidy? And what makes the Ratner proposal better than this one? Both may have their qualities, but only one (if that) will be built.
Testing the donut hypothesis August 6, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in America, London, Maps, Regeneration.add a comment
An interesting project from Radical Cartography:
These maps show the distribution of income (per capita) around the 25 largest metropolitan areas in the US (all those with population greater than 2,000,000). The goal was to test the “donut” hypothesis — the idea that a city will create concentric rings of wealth and poverty, with the rich both in the suburbs and in the “revitalized” downtown, and the poor stuck in between.
This does seem to have some validity in older cities like Boston, New York, Philadelphia, or Chicago, but in newer cities it is not the case. Instead of donuts, one finds “wedges” of wealth occupying a continuous pie-slice from the center to the periphery.
Just from visual inspection, it also seems that poverty donuts all tend to have about a five-mile radius, regardless of the size of the city. Perhaps this is the practical limit for commuting without a car?
I can’t do a perfect comparison with London because we don’t have small-area income data available like they do in the States, but this map of unemployment might do the job:

How does this match the theory? Okay, I suppose, if you take the West End and the Square Mile as the ‘centre’ of London. The ‘poor’ band seems to be proportionally wider in London than in the American cities Bill looks at, perhaps because of the artificial limit imposed on London by the green belt – if you looked at the same data for ‘Greater Greater London’, including satellite towns beyond the green belt, you might get a picture more similar to the American one.
Link-dump: energy efficiency, regeneration, densities, buy-to-let and more August 1, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in Housebuilding, Housing economics, Housing investment, Housing markets, Housing need, Linkage, London, Planning, Regeneration.add a comment
Apologies for the light posting of late, which was due to more work demands and some very pleasant weekends away. There’s a lot to catch up on so here’s a quick link-dump – I’ll try to come back to one or two of these items in more detail later.
- The Sustainable Development Commission has published ‘Stock take: delivering improvements in existing housing‘, which details “the technical options available for minimising the energy and water consumed and waste produced by residents of the existing housing stock”. The big question for me is what can be done to improve the efficiency of privately owned homes, with a particular question mark over privately rented housing, which the report rightly identifies as suffering from a ’split incentive’ problem – the tenant doesn’t have the incentive to invest in upgrading the home when she’s not going to be living there long, and the landlord doesn’t have the incentive to do so because she doesn’t pay the bills. Personally I think the landlord should pay some of the bill, but then I would say that because I’m a tenant. See also “Reducing the Carbon Impact of Private Rented Housing“
- England’s Housing Timebomb, from the National Housing Federation, features a prediction from Oxford Economic Forecasting that “the average house price in England will increase by around 50% by 2011, from just under GBP195,000 at the beginning of 2006 to GBP286,000, equivalent to 9.2 times the projected average salary for 2011″. The study concludes that housing associations should therefore be building or refurbishing 80,000 affordable homes each year instead of the current 40,000, which would obviously require much more funding from the state. They might well be right, but this one might get filed under “They would say that, wouldn’t they?”.
- The Town and Country Planning Association has published a commentary by Julie Cowans with the ungainly title of “Cities and regions of sustainable communities – New strategies”, but the potentially radical message that traditional approaches to addressing poverty (focusing on the “worst” estates first) should be abandoned in favour of proactive policies aimed at creating mixed income communities, i.e. enticing middle-income households into poor areas and trying to capture the resulting increases in land or property values. This has already excited some comment in the housing blogosphere (such as it is): Hannah is sceptical, Kevin pretty enthusiastic. I think Cowans may be drawing on the findings of this work, which I’ve started reading but have yet to finish. Anyway, hope to say more on this in due course.
- According to CB Richard Ellis, there has been an extraordinary increase in the density of new residential developments in London, no less than a quadrupling (in terms of habitable rooms per hectare) in just four years. They seem to mostly put this down to policy changes, but surely the huge rise in land costs (which obviously isn’t entirely unrelated to policy) is the main driver? Interesting quote: “We found schemes within regeneration and other special policy areas are frequently gaining planning permission for greater density than is recommended in the London Plan”.
- Labour-run London boroughs are building a lot more affordable housing than their Conservative counterparts, according to Inside Housing: “The 11 Tory authorities in power before the election were due to deliver just 18 per cent of grant funded homes in the capital.” Word on the grapevine is that some incoming Tory administrations have effectively vetoed large numbers of affordable housing developments that were going through the planning stage. Certainly, I don’t expect Hammersmith & Fulham council will be delivering 65% affordable housing in the next few years, as it has in the past.
- And finally, the Financial Times celebrates ten years of buy-to-let in the UK
Sensible comment on demolitions shocker June 24, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in Housing economics, Housing markets, Media, Regeneration.6 comments
Good to see someone commenting on this who has actually taken time to find out what’s happening. John Perry in Public Finance:
In the past few months alone, we have seen veteran journalist Sir Simon Jenkins in the Guardian and the programme Tonight with Trevor McDonald both attacking the notion of demolishing older houses. The Tonight programme, like several others, focused on what could be done by throwing money at one particular house, ignoring the problems of the wider area.
Meanwhile, Jenkins refers regularly to ‘Yvette Cooper’s proposal to demolish 150,000 Midlands and north country terrace houses’. Apart from the exaggeration, of which more later, there is the turn of phrase, which evokes stone-built cottages in Wensleydale rather than pokey two-up, two-down terraces in Liverpool or Stoke-on-Trent.
The prime mover against demolition has been the pressure group Save, whose assessment (on its website) is that as many as 400,000 houses will come down in the pathfinder areas. To those anxious to get on the housing ladder in the south of England, or who have invested their savings in modernising a terraced house, these figures must seem to be a travesty of housing policy. But put them under closer scrutiny, and the argument crumbles.
For a start, there are still something like 2.5 million Victorian terraced houses in England. The vast majority of these form excellent homes or can be modernised with some modest investment. But some are obsolete. That is, they are either too small, too badly designed or in too poor condition to be satisfactorily improved. Or – and this is often the case in the pathfinder areas – there are simply too many houses of the same type, age and size in the same place. For example, in Stoke-on-Trent, more than half of the housing stock is Victorian, consisting mainly of small, back-of-pavement terraces.
Sometimes, this kind of housing can be transformed and given a new niche in the housing market. As part of the local pathfinder programme, Urban Splash has converted 108 terraced houses in Salford into trendy ‘upside down’ units. There were long queues when they went on sale in April and they are now sold out. But this is redevelopment in all but name – the terraces were totally hollowed out and the yards and back alleys bulldozed. It is a tremendous example of regeneration but its effect depends in part on the scarcity value. Doing this to thousands of houses simply isn’t possible.
Opponents of demolition seem to forget that we do need to replace old houses at some point. The country currently replaces fewer than one in 1,000 houses each year – and most demolition is of tower blocks, not Victorian terraces. No-one – least of all the pathfinder agencies – is contemplating mass demolition. The aim must be selective renewal of the most difficult property, as part of the wider regeneration of poor neighbourhoods.
The other argument deployed by the critics is that local residents are up in arms against demolition plans. As Save says on its website: ‘Householders are being forced out of their beloved homes following minimal and often misinformed consultations.’ But the striking thing about many of the pathfinders is not the level of opposition, but the degree of support that they are obtaining for their renewal plans. Stoke and Hull provide two examples.
The Renew North Staffordshire pathfinder expects to replace just over 12,000 houses over 20 years. Although this might seem a lot, it also aims to refurbish or improve 63,000 houses and build 15,000 new ones. But there is no grand plan for demolition – the process is taking place at neighbourhood level, where master plans are being devised in conjunction with residents. One of the pathfinder’s innovations is the appointment of ‘residents’ friends’ in each area, answerable to the local Citizens Advice Bureau rather than to the council or the pathfinder. They help residents articulate their problems and give them independent advice. By putting unprecedented effort into involving residents, Renew is emerging with plans that have high proportions of local support – even from people whose houses might be demolished.
The Gateway pathfinder is more advanced with its renewal plans for some neighbourhoods in Hull – but still has support from residents. Houses have already been demolished, and local people are demanding faster replacement of the remaining boarded-up properties. Again, the pathfinder has used a variety of methods to find out local opinion and has high levels of support for what it is doing. It has adopted a ‘charter’, which sets out the promises made to local people. Residents engaged in the process have made a video showing their ambitions for their community. The level of support has convinced the local press, which is also calling for faster demolition of the worst houses.
The latest documentation on the pathfinders nationally – available on their websites or that of the Audit Commission – suggests that on current plans they will replace some 60,000 properties. Some further clearance might be planned in later phases, for which the pathfinders have yet to produce detailed plans. But it seems most unlikely that they will reach the total of 150,000 cited by [Simon] Jenkins, much less the absurd maximum put forward by Save. And this is over a period of up to 15 years, including of course many thousands of unpopular postwar developments as well as the cherished ‘north country terraces’. To put the figures in perspective, the pathfinders cover in total more than three-quarters of a million homes.
Biloxi Blues for the New Urbanists May 23, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in America, Communities, Design, Planning, Regeneration.3 comments
Here (and reproduced below the fold for non-subscribers) is a great article in the New York Times on the battle over the reconstruction of Biloxi, the Mississippi resort town devastated last autumn by Hurricane Katrina. It depicts a bunch of New Urbanists, with their elaborate plan for a neat, walkable, picket-fence New Biloxi against … well, against almost everyone else.
I’m not that familiar with New Urbanism, so I found it rather educational. I can see the attraction of aspects of their favoured designs, but when they’re so uniformly applied the effect must be stifling (as Peter Weir recognised). There’s something creepy about how carefully every detail of every building is controlled, and combined with their apparently exclusionary approach to consultation this is surely not the way to rebuild a community.
Link from Brad Plumer’s blog, a rich source of other interesting links, such as this, this, and this.
Valley of the one-bed flats May 17, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in London, Planning, Regeneration.3 comments
As Developing News notes, the Lower Lea Planning Framework has just been published by the Mayor. This “seeks to build on the area’s unique network of waterways and islands to attract new investment and opportunities, and to transform the Valley into a new sustainable, mixed use city district”. In terms of housing that means:
Maximising the use of this land and the industrial land that is retained indicates that the LLV would have the capacity to deliver between 30,000 and 40,000 new homes (with at least 44% as family housing)
Surprised there’s that much family housing expected? Don’t be – they’re counting 2-bed flats as ‘family housing’, which is rather stretching the term. If you dig a little deeper it turns out that they’re only expecting 33% of the total to come with 3 bedrooms or more. Compared to the estimated requirements from the Mayor’s own study of an annual supply of 40% 4-bed plus, this has to be a serious disappointment from a housing needs perspective. The Lower Lea Valley must be as close to a blank page as we’re going to get in London, and if we can’t build serious amounts of family housing there where can we?
Link: Developing [news] March 31, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in Design, Linkage, London, Planning, Regeneration.add a comment
For a blog with plenty to say (and I mean plenty – thirteen posts today! Haven’t they heard of the nap?) about planning, architecture and housing in London, see Developing [news], run by Hana Loftus of General Public Agency. I look forward to it reducing my already-slothlike posting rate – I was going to write a post about the new Environmental Audit Committee report, only to find that Hana’s covered it nicely already.
Tear down the high rises? March 22, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in America, Communities, Design, Europe, Housing markets, International, Regeneration.add a comment
In an oldie but goldie post over at the AHI blog, David Smith argues that “High-rise public housing never works. Never has worked, never will work”.
Overall he makes a very convincing case, and mostly I agree – high-rise housing filled with poor people has been a disaster here in the UK as much as in America or France. How much of this was down to the physical form of the buildings? Just about all of it, says David, though I think the examples he cites demonstrate that the kind of inhabitants matter too. Maybe high-rise blocks wouldn’t be so bad if they weren’t populated with high proportions of bored, workless young men, for example. Here in London, some local authorities have moved the families out of their towers, refurbished them and converted them to 100% sheltered housing for the elderly, for example, so there may be some use for some of these buildings after all. As for the rest, I agree with David – tear ‘em down.
The post raises another issue for me. David quotes this passage from Christopher Caldwell in the NY Times Magazine:
If you don’t vary the housing units in a given neighborhood – if you fill entire quarters of the city with standard-issue monoliths – you condemn upwardly mobile people to constant movement. The only people who develop any sense of place are those trapped in the poverty they started in.
Again, I agree. But doesn’t this apply to the private sector too? Here in London, most new private supply consists of one or two bed flats in high-density developments. There’s plenty of demand for them (for now) and no doubt they do the job for their inhabitants for a few years, but you can’t raise a family in them. So should planning authorities do more to guide the market towards producing fewer, larger homes to keep families in the inner city? Won’t this just drive up prices for everyone? And can we really have ‘mixed communities’ if the only family housing in inner cities is for poor families? I don’t pretend to have the answers to these questions, but I think we need to be asking them.
Determining design March 20, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in Design, Housing markets, Regeneration.add a comment
Here in the UK an increasing proportion of new affordable housing is provided on sites comprising mostly market-price housing, through what are known as ‘Section 106′ agreements. In exchange for planning permission to build new homes for sale, the developer agrees to provide a proportion free to a housing association for letting to those in housing need. In high-cost areas such as London, these ‘S106′ units tend to be part-funded by government grant, which makes it difficult to identify how much extra housing S106 is really contributing. But since units provided on S106 sites (as opposed to those built entirely by housing associations) now account for more than half all affordable housing output, they are certainly contributing to the mixing of tenures the government wants to see.
Concerns have been raised as to whether affordable homes built by private developers and handed over as part of S106 agreements are as high quality as those build directly by housing associations. These concerns receive some support in some interesting research recently published by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and written by Jon Watson. He finds that S106 units are generally smaller than those built by housing associations, and usually fail to meet the space standards set out in the ‘Scheme Development Standards’, which are mandatory for homes built by associations but not those provided by private developers.
Watson suggests that private developers can get away with this by playing off housing associations against one another – if one baulks at taking on sub-standard housing, you can always find another that won’t be so squeamish. He worries that this is storing up problems for the future:
If it is accepted that SDS sets standards which aim to support long-term sustainability of dwellings, such as tenant requirements, tenant running costs, RSL maintenance costs and letability, then this could have significant, long-term implications in these areas.
This reflects a perennial problem in housing supply – those who build and sell homes in the short term are generally not those who will have to live in or manage them in the long term. This inherent mis-match probably explains a good deal of the shoddy product turned out by councils, housing associations and private developers today and in the past. In fact, the standards of design on regeneration projects, where the incumbent residents are closely involved in deciding how their environment will look, tend to be higher than those on new-build schemes. Since badly-designed new affordable housing has clearly contributed to serious deprivation and exclusion in the past, shouldn’t we be looking for ways to involve future residents – those on waiting lists, for example – in the design of new housing?
Regeneration the Brazilian way March 9, 2006
Posted by Brickonomist in Communities, International, London, Regeneration.add a comment
Today the president of Brazil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, visited with Deputy PM John Prescott a regeneration scheme in London’s East End “to share ideas on regenerating deprived areas”. I wonder who learnt more? The West Ham and Plaistow project is a New Deal for Communities scheme, set up by Labour to bring together local services, funding streams and, most importantly, communities themselves to try and address the multitudinous problems of the most deprived areas in the country. NDCs seem to have had broadly positive results so far, though probably not as positive as Labour had hoped.
Maybe we in the UK can learn from what they’re doing in Brazil. For example, there’s this World Bank report on “Integrated urban ugrading for the poor : the experience of Ribeira Azul, Brazil”. Among the key findings are the importance of “clear roles and responsibilities in institutional arrangements [and] the need for strong local government participation”, factors which have historically been similarly crucial but too often lacking in regeneration efforts here.