The Jerusalem Post

UK to build 17 towns, villages to ease housing squeeze

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LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s government announced plans on Monday to build 17 new towns and villages across the English countrysid­e in a bid to ease a chronic housing shortage.

The new “garden” communitie­s – from Cumbria in the North to Cornwall on England’s southern-most tip – will be part of a scheme to build up to 200,000 new homes, Housing and Planning Minister Gavin Barwell said in a statement.

That would still be a fraction of the million houses the government has said it wants to see built from 2015-2020 in an already densely populated nation.

Successive government­s have promised to tackle a shortage that has seen house prices spiral in London and other major cities out of the reach of many buyers.

But developers have complained about a lack of available land and strict planning laws that outlaw developmen­t on “greenbelt” land around existing towns and give local councils the power to block constructi­on.

Britain asked local authoritie­s last year to say if they were interested in having new garden developmen­ts – based on a 19th-century idea of housing growing population­s in self-contained towns surrounded by countrysid­e.

Barwell announced the locations for the first time on Monday and said the state would loosen planning restrictio­ns and give £7.4 million to help fund the building.

The three newly announced towns, with more than 10,000 homes each, will be built near Aylesbury, Taunton and Harlow, the government said.

The new garden villages, including Bailrigg in Lancaster, Long Marston in Stratford-on-Avon, Welborne in Hampshire and Culm in Devon, will each have 1,500 to 10,000 properties.

Together with seven other garden towns already announced, the new developmen­ts could provide almost 200,000 homes, Barwell said.

 ?? (Neil Hall/Reuters) ?? A BUILDER works on the roof of a new residentia­l property developmen­t in north London. Successive government­s have promised to tackle a housing shortage that has seen house prices spiral in London and other major cities out of the reach of many buyers.
(Neil Hall/Reuters) A BUILDER works on the roof of a new residentia­l property developmen­t in north London. Successive government­s have promised to tackle a housing shortage that has seen house prices spiral in London and other major cities out of the reach of many buyers.

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