Stock answer proves elusive
Series: Planning (for the Natural and Built Environment) ; (1561) 19 March 2004, 15(1)Publication details: 2004Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: Reviews the current level of outstanding residential planning permissions and its effect on the housing market following the publication of the ODPM report "Outstanding planning permission for housing development in northern England", which is available at www.odpm.gov.uk. The research suggests that gluts of outstanding planning permissions such as in Hull and Newcastle are exceptions rather than the rule and the overall backlog of unused consents stands at a healthy level. However the higher level of unimplemented brownfield (60%) than greenfield consents (40%), underlines the difficulty of turning consents into homes. Stresses that the systems in place for monitoring the take-up of consents are inadequate. Table covering estimates of outstanding planning permissions.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS67648 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 125574-1001 |
Reviews the current level of outstanding residential planning permissions and its effect on the housing market following the publication of the ODPM report "Outstanding planning permission for housing development in northern England", which is available at www.odpm.gov.uk. The research suggests that gluts of outstanding planning permissions such as in Hull and Newcastle are exceptions rather than the rule and the overall backlog of unused consents stands at a healthy level. However the higher level of unimplemented brownfield (60%) than greenfield consents (40%), underlines the difficulty of turning consents into homes. Stresses that the systems in place for monitoring the take-up of consents are inadequate. Table covering estimates of outstanding planning permissions.