Green perspectives on Stockwood and Bristol. Mostly.

Thursday 27 November 2008

What the Government giveth.......


We're lucky enough in Stockwood to border a big chunk of Bristol's 'Green Belt'. It's one of the things that encouraged us to move here.

Some of it, as the map shows, is within the city boundary, including the golf course, the Open Space, and even the sports ground beside Sturminster Road. But most is in neighbouring BaNES, giving us that pleasant rural edge.

For now.

Three or four years ago, the Regional Assembly - which yesterday ceased to be - together with its partners in GOSW drafted a regional plan - the Regional Spatial Strategy - saying that the Bristol region needed many thousands more houses to accommodate its growth in importance, turnover, and population. Most would be in 'urban extensions'. 6,000 of them should be on our south-east corner. It would mean significant loss of Green Belt land, but not to worry, they'd designate some more. Somewhere near Radstock Norton.

Then it all got into a long-winded planning process, in which Bristol Greens and various other lobby groups argued against this unsustainable expansion - while property developers argued enthusiastically for it. Last year saw many of us repeating the arguments in front of an 'Examination in Public' at Exeter. We finished up evens in this corner of Bristol, still with land to find for 6,000 homes, and a big gash in the Green Belt. The report went off to the government.

Next, the government put its own stamp on it - and upped the figures further(no-one quite knows why, and they haven't told us). Once again, lots of us challenged the numbers, which seem far higher than is needed.

But unless the Government has a change of heart (or a change of the growth agenda), the local councils are stuck with aligning the local plans - the BDF, or Bristol Development Framework - to the government's numbers, by allocating land for the housing they say is necessary. For the SE Bristol extension (Keynsham to Whitchurch), that's 10,500, including 1,500 within the Bristol boundary.

I've been to two meetings about this this week. At the first, in Long Ashton, many residents were (rightly) hopping mad at the prospect of their green valley being filled with housing, especially as there's no real case been made for it.

At the second, BCC planners were inviting reps of various 'stakeholder' groups to consider how the city could squeeze in all the extra homes demanded by the government. Most people felt that more intensive development would be much better than making new land grabs - but it would be hard to manage. No use building homes if they turn into social deserts. The 'buy-to-let' market has a lot to answer for.

But it looks like we can say goodbye to 'rural' Stockwood.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Most people felt that more intensive development would be much better than making new land grabs"

This is all very well - apart from the fact that most Brits just don't want to live in a dense development. It's not our culture, most people love to live with gardens, space, trees, roses round the doorway if possible, and why not.

Densification - an ugly word for an ugly idea.

An ugly idea that won't work.

We don't need more housing, we just need to use what we have properly.

Pete Goodwin said...

Can't argue with that - especially the bit about not needing more housing, when in practice there are so many decent places lying empty. I suppose that, as usual, once you follow the money trail you can see what's driving the expansion that the government is imposing on us.

I'm not so sure about most people wanting greenery around them... it's depressing how many want to scrap it in favour of some hard standing for the car(s).

Anonymous said...

I think that's just expediency though, Pete, a matter of being limited in space and money.

Watch any of these concreters if they had a win of a few million quid - they'd be off demanding their slice of England's green and pleasant, buying a country estate with lawns, orchid greeenhouses, fields, woods and the odd ha-ha.

If it's good enough for Tony Benn, the Workers' Champion, it's good enough for the rest of us.