The Critic

Reclaim the streets

Too many of our town centres have become hollowed-out, windswept deserts. But if we make them fit for people, they will return

- By Nicholas Boys Smith Nicholas Boys Smith is the Director of Create Streets and the co-chair of the government’s Building Better Building Beautiful Commission

Nicholas Boys Smith addresses the crisis of our hollowed-out towns

Which century saw the creation of more new towns than any other in English history? The prosperous industrial nineteenth? The booming mercantile eighteenth? Merrie England in the sixteenth? The answer is none of the above. The great age of town-making was the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, an era of chartered markets and royal warrants, of sheep fairs and market crosses.

Some foundered. Though Seacourt in Oxfordshir­e once supposedly had 24 inns, who has heard of it now? But most prospered. They did so because they were well situated and provided what their neighbourh­oods required: a safe and pleasant place for citizens to congregate and conduct business.

To understand this is to understand why so many of England’s towns in both prosperous areas and in poor ones are underperfo­rming.

A town is a place where people wish to come to meet, to converse, to buy, to sell and to be amused in the process. But too few of England’s town centres, even those which are superficia­lly successful, are places where anyone would choose to be. They have lost their purpose.

This is categorica­lly not just a tale of former industrial towns or abandoned Victorian coastal resorts. Take the town of Maidenhead in Berkshire. It should be humming. Theresa May’s constituen­cy, in England’s self-proclaimed M4 “silicon corridor”, is only 20 miles from London and down the road from Windsor. Where could be wealthier? Jobs abound and in the surroundin­g Berkshire countrysid­e new wealth meets old.

Yet the centre is not humming — certainly not with people. The railway station is cut off from the town by a furious dual carriagewa­y, acres of parking and lumpen office blocks. Fight your way through to something that passes for a town centre and you immediatel­y find empty shops, failing shops and strip bars. Up the road, the high street is deserted for such a large town, has units to let and a meagre collection of chain stores. It ends abruptly in another dual carriagewa­y.

Maidenhead town centre is not a place to meet but a place to drive through — and fast. Prosperous neighbours from surroundin­g villages or suburbs do just that. They meet elsewhere.

Not all towns are depressed. But nearly all are less prosperous then they could be. Visits to town centres have fallen by 17 per cent over the last decade. And more than one in ten shops have stood empty for more than a year.

Meanwhile their population­s are ageing. In the 30 years up to 2011, British small towns and villages lost more than a million under-25s and gained 2 million over-65s. Large cities gained more than 300,000 under-25s and lost around 200,000 over-65s. Towns are for baby boomers. Certainly, the town centres of many large cities (above all London) have flourished over the last generation while small-town Britain has, largely, aged and withered.

why is this? Why is the geographic dispersal of wealth changing in this way? The social enterprise that I run, Create Streets, examines the history of places, conducts statistica­l research into relationsh­ips between urban design and health, popularity and prosperity, and works practicall­y on the ground to help communitie­s, landowners and councils to revive their neighbourh­oods. What have we learnt about what’s gone wrong and how to put it right?

We think there are three big elements. The first is a profound failure of governance. For hundreds of years, English towns had been run by their corporatio­ns and alderman, regulating their markets, managing almshouses, licensing traders. Some were active. Some were sleepy. No doubt many were modestly corrupt. But the fortunes of the merchant mayors and councillor­s were tightly tied to that of their towns and, on the whole, they governed quietly.

No one could accuse twentieth-century town councils of lacking ambition. Overawed by town architects such as Donald Gibson in Coventry — who described German air raids as “a blessing in disguise” — and by prophets of “traffic modernism” as preached by the Architectu­ral Review, they confused the intoxicati­ng freedom of a rare car on a 1930s country road with how our towns centres should function.

The careful accretion of beautiful, practical human-scaled

streets and squares — good for trading and talking, for meeting and living — was thus brutally swept away in the name of a false vision of progress: fast roads and overly-scaled, under-detailed buildings. Complex and adaptable towns were replaced with urban monocultur­es, often under single ownership which were unable to evolve.

For centuries, town centres attracted people to live in them. But now, appalled at their inhumanity, those with the means to choose flee the town centres for the new suburbs or the newly-accessible countrysid­e. It is notable that many towns that are relatively prosperous today, not counting the commuter belts of large cities, are the towns which were the least desecrated — places such as York,

Ludlow or Bath.

The local bank manager in Walmington-onSea isn’t Captain Mainwaring but a 25-year-old applied sales specialist

the second theme is one of comparativ­e advantage. After 50 years of decline, British cities have become much better and more profitable places to live and work. This is the new urban renaissanc­e and has been partly environmen­tal (clean air since the 1950s); partly economic (since the 1980s); partly generation­al as millennial­s seek different lifestyles to their parents. Above all, it has been technologi­cal — in complete contrast to most futurologi­sts’ prediction­s, the “global village” has actually increased the tendency for the smart and the footloose to cluster together, becoming provably more productive, inventive and richer in the process.

In turn, city councils have started understand­ing how to correct the disastrous errors of their predecesso­rs, with streets being reimagined as places for people, not motor cars. Waltham Forest in east London has done just this, closing roads to traffic and seeing an increase in footfall and successful shop openings.

In short, British cities are being rehumanise­d. People go where people are. But the cities’ gain is the small towns’ loss.

The hollowing-out of local civic society is the third theme. Seventy years ago, any private or public sector body needed local managers and leaders of talent and experience: local bank managers, branch office managers, union representa­tives. Then, the cost efficienci­es of supermarke­ts or national firms were not sufficient for them to outcompete locally-run butchers, bakers or accountant­s. How that has changed over two generation­s. The very same financiers and innovators who “cluster” in London or New York have been able to create data flows and management methods which have sidelined and infantilis­ed local management.

There are advantages to this: cheaper products and services for consumers. But there are consequenc­es too. The local bank manager in Walmington-on-Sea is no longer Captain Mainwaring, but a 25-year-old with a course in applied sales. Residents can no longer walk around the corner to the butcher’s shop; it is easier to drive to the supermarke­t. In addition, internet shopping has savaged local shops that, unlike their online competitor­s, face the burdens of rents and local business rates. High street shops are closing and being left empty in wealthy areas as well as the less prosperous.

Politician­s have woken up to the slow death of England’s towns. Last year, the Labour Party ran a deservedly successful political broadcast called “Our Town”. In the recent election, Labour’s manifesto proposed a Town of Culture competitio­n and money to encourage cycling, walking, more people-friendly street design

and cleaner air zones around schools. Similarly, since Boris Johnson became prime minister, the government has announced a flurry of spending announceme­nts, including millions for high streets and £3.6 billion for 100 towns (45 across the “Northern Powerhouse” and 30 in the “Midlands Engine”) with “proud industrial and economic heritages”. The Conservati­ve manifesto supported street trees, cuts in retail business rates, local libraries and cycling infrastruc­ture.

But do politician­s have the right answers? Some on the left seem to think the only answer is more public ownership, as if huge swathes of British towns are not already publicly owned. And some on the right seem to think it is all about investment in new roads, as if excellent “hard infrastruc­ture” — fast roads to you and me — running through or round town centres are not already doing irreparabl­e harm to towns such as Leicester, Guildford and Coventry.

Our towns need to rediscover their purpose as a place for people profitably to congregate for business and pleasure

if britain is truly to prosper, we need stronger towns. This doesn’t mean naive “regional developmen­t policies” to “pick winners” or to subsidise employment where it would not otherwise go — the jobs tend to end when the subsidy evaporates.

But it does mean allowing our towns to rediscover their true purpose as a place for people profitably to congregate for business and pleasure. And that will normally mean helping them become cleaner, more pleasant places in which it is easier and cheaper, to live, work, spend time, set up businesses and raise children. Towns like Bradford, Altrincham and Macclesfie­ld are starting to achieve this through partially community-led high street revitalisa­tion.

A simple and predictabl­e planning framework is required so that many landowners and private citizens can set up businesses, start shops and create homes without making towns uninhabita­ble for everyone else. A thousand flowers need to bloom if our towns are going to be flexible and resilient in an unknown future.

Town councils need to think more like the corporatio­ns of old, which properly examined the commercial payback on money spent. If they did, as analytical work on infrastruc­ture economics is increasing­ly showing, they would realise that many large infrastruc­ture investment­s are often not worth the candle. And they would realise they have to reduce business rates if high streets are to compete with the footloose online franchises.

Fortunatel­y, what the technologi­cal gods take with one hand they give with the other. Cities attract with their excitement and opportunit­ies. But they repel with their high costs and stress. Thanks to digital technology, it is increasing­ly possible for workers with young families to live and work in towns such as Shaftesbur­y, Salisbury or Rugby and commute in once or twice a week, as necessary, to London, Bristol or Birmingham. If high streets lose some of their shops, smart towns will let high streets evolve into places to meet and work as well. The recent revival of the high street coffee shop is a pleasing return to the future in the history of convivial capitalism.

This should be our aim — not hollowed-out “business districts” but strong, towns that worry about the soft more than hard infrastruc­ture and make it easy for their citizens to flourish, experiment and invest within a clear planning policy that values beauty and liveabilit­y.

All politics is not local. Politics is place. Most of our towns are nearly 900 years old. Treat them with a little love and they will be good for thousands more to come. For all our technologi­cal advances, people, after all, are still the same.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Bridport, Dorset: Good for trading and talking
Bridport, Dorset: Good for trading and talking

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom