the density debate – a personal view christine whitehead london school of economics and
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The Density Debate – A Personal View
Christine Whitehead London School of Economics and
Cambridge Centre for Housing and Planning Research
East Thames Housing GroupThe Building Centre London
24 January 2008
How Do We Define Density?Density is defined very differently by
planners and economists• Planning densities are defined in terms of
physical attributes – numbers of dwellings or habitable rooms per hectare;
• Economists are interested in outcomes in terms of population per hectare and densities of occupation;
• The two are usually related to one another but not always; the relationship is changing; and sometimes inconsistent
Why Are We Interested?• Important element in the debate about
whether planning policy is too constraining and whether the emphasis on density is helping to increase prices;
• Regarded as a core element in the sustainability and regeneration agenda;
• Strongly related to other policies notably on brownfield development; Section 106; and mixed communities – but the linkages often not understood
Government Policy on Densities• Requirement to increase residential planning
densities placed on regions and local authorities;• Formal requirements in PPS3 (2006) actually no
tougher than those in PPG 3 introduced in 2000. But the rhetoric and the pressures put on authorities much stronger;
• Interpreted differently in different areas but generally the pattern is based on location in relation to the centre and on transportation. Little emphasis on other aspects of sustainability (assumed able to respond);
• London’s policy in the London Plan very much stronger than anywhere else in the country – with major implications for the size of dwellings and built form
Actual Densities• Outside London, densities have been falling – in
suburban as well as central areas;• In London immigration and population growth
have necessarily increased densities;• Densities of occupation vary greatly between
different groups of households; between tenures; and most importantly by income;
• Location and space per dwelling are highly correlated with one another, in part because of their relationship to income distribution
Fundamental Tensions• In a growing economy demand for housing
increases roughly in proportion to income growth – so if incomes rise by 2% p.a. for twenty years we want about 50% more housing overall;
• As supply is constrained this pressure increases house prices; differentially increases the price of larger units; and increases problems of affordability at the bottom end of the market;
• Role of planners impossible? Must aim to use less land; build on more brownfield; achieve mixed communities; provide more space per person; provide more units; ensure better design; and improve quality and services for both additional and established households
Economic Principles of Planning
• Economic rationale for planning is to overcome market failures – encourage positive externalities and discourage negative; improve information; assist adjustment; and ensure adequate provision of public open space and services;
• Higher densities address issues of urban sprawl and the need for diverse and productive economy – but also costs of too high densities in terms of pollution, congestion and the loss of value to individuals;
• Fundamental objective to maximise social value of development – but while general objectives are clear, relationships are complex and target based approaches may produce perverse results
Market Pressures• Demand for separate units increases with
demographic growth but equally with incomes across established as well as additional households;
• Income elasticities similar for internal and external space – and stronger for houses than flats;
• Also evidence of pressures to live closer to the countryside – but value of local open space particularly high;
• Some types of household value central locations and newer migrants generally demand less housing per household;
• Given a growing economy one would expect to build at high standards suitable for the future and to allow older/less appropriate housing filtering down the system
The Evidence in Densities• Population densities fell significantly from
1945 up to the 1980s. They stabilised in the 1990s (1% decline) while densities in London actually rose by 8%;
• This is partly the outcome of constrained supply and rising prices;
• England’s urban areas are relatively dense as compared to other high income countries – except for central London;
• On wider definitions of London, densities are high by international standards
The Evidence on Sustainability• The most quoted estimates that doubling
density halves energy use is based on a simple correlation and reflects stage of development rather than a direct relationship;
• Corrected estimates show an impact of well below 10% and would involve quite unrealistic policy constraints;
• Higher densities support better public transport – but the critical figures for this are between 25dph and 60dph ;
• The position with respect to local services – and healthy living – is even less clear – but again 50-60dph appears to be the relevant benchmark
Do Higher Densities Deliver?
• Higher densities traditionally generate more but shorter trips, using more public transport
• Evidence from the “revived” central urban areas such as Leeds suggests that as individual networks expand these trips are getting longer
• The growth of second and weekend homes is also relevant here as, if people have less space in the urban area, they substitute other (less sustainable?) lifestyles
• The most important issues are how the demand for space can be satisfied and the ways in which the construction industry is responding to market and policy pressures
Table 1: Housing Densities in Europe
Useful floor area per dwelling (M2) Year Total
dwelling stock
Year Dwellings completed
Austria 2003 93.9 2002 101.0 Belgium 1991 86.3 2001 119.0 Denmark 2002 109.1 2001 112.4 Finland 2002 77.0 2003 90.2 France 2002 89.6 2002 112.6 Germany 2002 89.7 2003 113.9 Italy 1991 90.3 2000 81.5 Netherlands 2000 98.0 2000 115.5 Sweden 2003 91.6 2003 128.0 England 2001 86.9 1981-2001 82.7
The Policy Response• Rapidly increasing planning densities; • Smaller units with less space per
room; • More flats; • Inflexible built form;• More shared ownership rather than
social rented dwellings
Table 2: Density of new dwellings by region: 2000-05
2000 2005 Proportional Increase
London 56 112 100 South East 24 41 71 North West 26 41 56 North East 24 40 67 Yorkshire and Humberside 22 39 77 South West 25 39 56 East Midlands 22 38 81 West Midlands 24 36 50 East of England 22 35 59 England 25 41 64
Table 3: The Changing Make Up of Completions in England
Completions
2000/1001 2004/2005
Change ( %)
England
1 bed 7 10
2 bed 27 38
3 bed 34 29
4 + bed 32 23
Flats 20 (25,970) 41 (63,920) +146%
Houses 80 (103,890) 59 (91,980) -11%
Total 129,866 155,893 +20%
Number of bedroom (est) 400,000 430,500 +8%
London
1 bed 18 24
2 bed 48 58
3 bed 25 12
4 + bed 9 6
Flats 58 (8,400) 19,920) 83 +138%
Houses 42 (6,080) (4,090) 17 -33%
Total 14,492 (11%) 24,063 +66%
Number of bedroom (est) 33,300
(av 2.3)
48,700
(av 2.0)
- 0.3
Figure 1: Shared Ownership as a percentage of all S106 completions
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
2001-02 2005-06
NE
NW
Yorks
E Mids
W Mids
East
London
SE
SW
England
Outcomes• Rising planning densities but stable or falling
actual densities outside London; • The London phenomenon – densities rising for
new construction 50% faster than elsewhere; • A massive change in dwelling composition
linked to declining space standards; • Increasing reliance on one and two bedroom
flats often with no through ventilation;• Is there a gap in the market provision of small
units? • Are we actually adding to the total stock
measured by space?• Can the mixed communities agenda operate?
What do People Want?: Market Evidence
• Declining occupancy rates in owner-occupied sector even in face of rapidly rising prices; relative decline in the prices of small flats (supply v demand/distribution of income) – although new dwelling premium; even initially occupancy lower than planned;
• Higher densities in the private rented sector – especially among those relatively new to the country; increasing overcrowding; rents still based on capacity to pay not quality;
• Groups who like central/dense living – young; single; students; less established households; older people looking for services?
Table 4: Tenure mix of London residents by migration origin and time
in the UK Rich
Countries Asylum
Countries Other Poor Countries
UK Born
Total Population
< 3 years
>3 years
< 3 years
>3 years
< 3 years
>3 years
Owned outright
1% 24% 2% 6% 3% 16% 21% 19%
Owned with a mortgage
13% 32% 6% 23% 11% 32% 43% 38%
Social Rented
6%
21%
35%
46%
21%
37%
26%
27%
Private Furnished
64% 15% 48% 16% 56% 8% 7% 8%
Private Unfurnished
16% 8% 8% 8% 9% 5% 4% 6%
Survey EvidencePeople buying in the market want:• Houses rather than flats;• Larger rooms even if fewer;• Quality kitchens/bathrooms;• Flexibility• Privacy, private space and well
managed communal space;• Access to shops, transport, and parking;• Energy and environmental efficiency;• Not to live in featureless boxes
What do Social Tenants Want?
• More space and larger rooms;• Better and more storage – inside and out;• Houses rather than flats;• To avoid noise pollution and poorly
managed/ used communal space;• Better design – flexibility; ventilation;
kitchens and bathrooms;• Good maintenance and rubbish disposal;• Access to parking, shops and transport;• Adequate security
Attitudes to Density• Density as such rarely the issue except for
those spending large proportions of time at home;
• Those overcrowded in the home notice – and dislike crowding in the area more;
• Conflation between density and high rise – in people’s attitudes ;
• Concerns about interaction between new high density buildings and the established neighbourhood
Three Examples• Vienna 1929 – Luxury Art Deco for the masses
(50 sq m per unit and lots of services) – now 80% plus “known to the police”
• China in 1990s – 7 sq m per person; 2007 28m2 per permanent resident for new construction; current government aspiration 100 sq m per unit
• London 2007: Homes for nurses at St Thomas’ Hospital – 230 flats for 400 plus hospital workers in 5-20 storey apartment blocks mixed with 330 private flats in separate buildings
Conclusions (1)• Perceptions of density thoroughly mixed up with
overcrowding; built form; location; and attitudes to the neighbourhood
• Urban England remains relatively densely populated. Only very central areas have below average densities as compared to other richer countries
• The benefits of higher densities are overstated and anyway depend on existing development far more than on new construction – especially if people move away because of higher density development
• Only in central London is there a case for much higher densities
Conclusions (2)• Higher densities, and especially high rise
must be associated with high quality design and better services. Even so they will only be suitable for relatively small groups of mainly better off households;
• Within central London a case can be made for iconic; well-managed; high service charged, super density close to good open space, local services and transport;
• If these attributes are forgotten the result is likely at best to be extremely poor value for money and at worst the slums of the future
Conclusions (3)• The case for increasing planning
densities at the lower end of the density scale is strong in order to maintain efficient services. However to be successful this policy must be combined with better designed homes which provide more space per household and greater flexibility – so that people actually want to live there now and in the future
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