Monthly Archives: December 2011

Industrial Plight – How One Midwest Town may Hold the Answer to the Regeneration of Industrial Small Town America.

As an outsider visiting the town of Holyoke, a small town in Western Massachusetts recently, my first impressions of the town weren’t initially of its underlying socio-economic problems, but rather, of the impressive but now derelict and gradually decaying shells … Continue reading

Posted in Development, Regeneration, Sustainability | 1 Comment

The Problems With Reform…

When is streamlining not a good thing? Apparently, when doing so means editing a 1300 page planning policy document down to just 52. Following the publication of its review of the draft National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), the general consensus … Continue reading

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Pulling the Plug – The Uncertain Future of Battersea Power Station.

Iconic benchmark of British industrial architecture or an archaic throwback occupying prime Central London development land? Whatever your views of the site at Battersea, although its coal-fired turbines stopped producing electricity over 25 years ago, the now derelict, Grade-II* listed power … Continue reading

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Localism and the Market – An Unsustainable Balancing Act or a Match Made in Heaven?

To those of us who have been following the progress of the government’s new localism bill passed last month, it comes as little surprise to discover that as is so often the case with all things planning related, ambiguity rules, and … Continue reading

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