A new report has concluded that a combination of wrong location, wrong transport and a lack of density is resulting in car dependent ‘tarmac’ housing estates which are increasing congestion, limiting housing choices for those who don’t want to drive everywhere, and damaging existing town centres.
What is being built in 2025? In search of the station, from Transport for New Homes, reveals that housing targets aimed at rural parts of the country and a developer-led choice of location are creating car-dependent estates far away from major urban areas and isolated from good public transport.
The report concluded that car-based suburban sprawl, with lifestyles shaped around driving, is now the default model of development.
Jenny Raggett, Project Coordinator at Transport for New Homes, said:
“New housing estates being built in England resemble a jigsaw puzzle with some of the most important pieces missing – the stations, the mass transit systems and on-site community provision and services. Housing targets aimed at rural or semi-rural parts of the country and a developer-led choice of location where to build, are plonking more and more giant housing estates on fields on the edge of towns and villages, places where it’s all about driving. We need to build differently to avoid this ‘doughnut effect’, whereby everything ends up on out of town greenfield sites whilst brownfield sites lie unbuilt and derelict, and high streets are dying.”
Steve Gooding, Director, RAC Foundation, said:
“With at-scale house building high on the Government’s agenda, this report is a timely reminder of what can go wrong in developing new homes but importantly also provides policymakers and developers with guidance and tangible examples of how to get it right in providing the sustainable, accessible and all-round live-able developments we need.”
What is being built in 2025? In search of the station, looked at nearly 40 new housing developments, including four in Europe (Germany and Sweden), and explored a number of themes, including: whether the development was ultimately designed around the car; traffic generation and its consequences; public transport connections including bus, local rail and trams; and whether there are a range of amenities to walk or cycle to. The report also includes a section on why the planning system fails to deliver sustainable transport.
Volunteers visited each development and looked at the type and mix of housing, transport links, layout and on-site facilities, and concluded that nearly every greenfield development was oriented around the car. None of the large-scale housing greenfield developments visited for the report were on metro or tram systems, buses were in many cases infrequent or insufficient and went to limited destinations, and safe and convenient active travel options did not connect the development to places people wanted to go to. The report only identified one large-scale greenfield development, Poundbury in Dorset, which it considered to be a vibrant ‘self-contained’ community on account of being genuinely mixed use and built from the start for walking rather than driving.
Steve Chambers, Sustainable Transport Campaigner at Transport for New Homes, said:
“Wherever your new home is, you should be able to go out the front door, and know that there are local amenities to walk to and turn up and go public transport available that connects you to a whole network of destinations. What our report found was that the current planning system is simply not delivering this vision. We need to bring the planning of new homes and sustainable transport together to create places that give people genuine choice about how they travel.”
To accomplish a different model of delivering new homes and avoid more car-dependent sprawl, Transport for New Homes makes three recommendations:
- Build transit-oriented developments serving residents from day one of occupation: New developments should be planned around better public transport, connected with metros, tram systems and comprehensive bus networks, available to residents on the day they move in to avoid entrenching car dependency.
- New homes must be built in better locations: The planning system needs to direct building in more sustainable locations, with decisions on where we build new homes taken with more of an evidence-based approach. Places must be selected that will work with new transport infrastructure and promote regeneration, economic growth and good access to services. A revised National Planning Policy Framework needs to make this kind of wider area planning possible.
- Deliverable masterplans that create delightful walkable and well-connected places: Local authorities and urban designers need to be able to masterplan large-scale developments as walkable, well-connected and mixed-use places with housebuilders then able to build to the plan. All parties involved need to have the assurance that the funding and governance will be in place to achieve sustainable transport aims. To achieve these, transport and land use planning must be considered at local and strategic levels with changes to the current planning system to make this possible.
Read What is being built in 2025? In search of the station in full.