...the only trouble is these sites are far from dormant!
Evening Standard journalist, Richard Godwin, who is also a Harringay resident, highlighted in his column this week that the mayor's office has published an interactive map of "underexploited" public land. 40,000 sites have been identified of which Boris says,
“[For] far too long, land owned by public bodies has lain dormant or [been] sold off with no benefit to the capital. [We] must build on the work done at City Hall in releasing land for development.”
However, when Richard looked closely at the areas he discovered that this "underexploited" dormant land is far from asleep but is in fact our local primary schools, Ducketts Common, Fairland Park, my beloved Railway Fields (over my dead body Boris), the Kurdish centre and various bits of Chestnuts Park to name but a few!
Public land is under scrutiny like never before - our parks, libraries, nature reserves, even it seems our schools are not safe from the developers beady eyes.
Tags for Forum Posts: public land
I could not agree more. There is a lot of land that it is not used to best effect.
I have approached Thames Water about the land along the banks of the New River to see if it can be prompted to participate in transforming it. I am awaiting a reply which I hope will be favourable.
The land that our terraced houses sit upon is underutilised. If everyone could agree then a terrace could be demolished, rebuilt denser and you could have the same amount of space as now but with some flats above and maybe a bit less garden. It would all look completely tasteful of course and not at all out of keeping with the surrounding Victorian terraces. I mean, just look at the wonders Paul Simon can work.
Why be so lateral, John? Think inside the box. There are oodles of ways developers can use existing buildings and their "footprint" far more intensively.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7ahIGLNNwo
Wow...just, wow.
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