The Herald on Sunday

Should we build on green belts?

Each week the Sunday Herald puts the most contentiou­s issues of the day under the magnifying glass to find out what’s true, what’s false and what needs to be done. Today Environmen­t Editor Rob Edwards examines whether there’s a case for building on our gr

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IT has been branded “Europark” though it has little to do with either Europe or parks. It’s a controvers­ial plan for 3,000 new homes on a large swathe of the green belt in North Lanarkshir­e.

Developer Orchard Brae says that building five new “villages” on fields and woods between the M8, Carnbroe, Cairnhill and Calderbank is about “breathing new life into underused green space”.

But local campaigner­s say the scheme will destroy the “de facto country park” of Woodhall and Faskine, and deprive people of a vital “green lung” for enjoying nature.

The argument is just one of many raging across Scotland about plans to build houses on green belts around towns and cities.

It typifies the contentiou­s issues at stake: the importance of green spaces, the need for new housing, the desires of local communitie­s and the potential profits of developers.

That is why the Associatio­n for the Protection of Rural Scotland (APRS) has chosen Calderbank for its annual general meeting on May 31. There, members will talk about plans to launch a new nationwide campaign to protect Scotland’s green belts from developmen­t – a campaign that will be fiercely opposed by housebuild­ers.

“This environmen­t needs the protection of every thinking person to save it from being ravished by the uncaring,” says Dr Ann Glen, secretary of Monkland Glen Community Council.

“Developmen­ts for housing should not be allowed to encroach on the green belt.”

Woodhall and Faskine have been green since the ice rolled back in Scotland, she argues. It is a rich natural habitat for otters, badgers, bats and over 37 bird species.

“Our communitie­s here are some of the unhealthie­st in Western Europe and some of Scotland’s most deprived,” she says. “So green places close to homes are invaluable for the encouragem­ent of exercise, the ‘green pill’ that doctors advise.”

Orchard Brae, however, takes a different view. Its mission is “to deliver an exceptiona­l mixed-use, residentia­l and recreation­al environmen­t”, it says. “The developmen­t will improve and extend the green network and bring employment and recreation­al benefits to the residentia­l communitie­s that surround it.”

As well as much-needed new homes, Europark will bring £500 million worth of investment, 1,100 jobs and £126m in extra household income, the company says. Its “green heart” will preserve a “riverpark” as public space and it will include community orchards and allotments.

Everyone, it seems, wants to be seen to be green. The reality of housing in green belts is more complex, with competing values unlikely to ever be reconciled.

The concept of green belts – land around built-up areas that should be protected from urban sprawl – was born around London in the 1940s.

There are 11 green belts in Scotland of 200,000 hectares around Greater Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen and other towns.

Scottish Government planning policy allows local authoritie­s to designate green belts for “protecting and enhancing the character, landscape setting and identity of the settlement”, and “protecting and providing access to open space”.

But many are threatened by housing. In addition to Europark, there are plans for 9,000 houses on five sites near Perth, 7,500 houses at two sites in Edinburgh, and major plans near St Andrews and Stirling.

To bring communitie­s together to oppose such developmen­ts, APRS is now preparing to launch a major campaign to protect Scotland’s green belts.

It points out that over 1,600 hectares of green belt has been lost around Edinburgh since it was first designated in 1949.

“We now believe that it is vital to lead a concerted campaign to protect remaining green belts from further attrition,” says director, John Mayhew. “Green belts should be protected for the long term. Once they are lost, they are gone forever. They will be even more important for our children and grandchild­ren than they have been for us.”

According to Mayhew, green belts are a vital tool for preserving the countrysid­e and their destructio­n harms some of Scotland’s most deprived communitie­s.

“Loss of green belts deprives people of nearby green spaces, which can have a substantia­l impact on both physical and mental wellbeing,” he argues.

“We recognise the pressure to build more housing, but previously developed brownfield sites should be developed first.

“Developmen­t sites in green belts should only be allocated as a last resort through the local council’s planning process, so that only the least valuable areas are lost.”

The trade associatio­n for housebuild­ers, Homes for Scotland, disagrees. Scotland is “mired in a housing crisis” and urgently needs new homes around cities, it argues.

Scotland’s population is rising and the number of households around Scotland’s

four main cities is projected to rise up to 24 per cent over the next 25 years, it says. There are also 150,000 households on waiting lists for places to live.

Yet the number of new homes being built in Scotland is now 40 per cent less than it was before the recession.

“Homes for Scotland believes we need at least 100,000 homes of all tenures over five years to meet the needs of all those living in Scotland,” says the group’s chief executive Nicola Barclay.

Half of new homes built in 2014-15 were on brownfield sites, and 199 hectares of previously used land were brought back into residentia­l use in 2016, she points out.

But there are limits to the use of brownfield sites, as they can be contaminat­ed or have difficult ground conditions.

“There simply isn’t enough brownfield land in cities like Edinburgh or Aberdeen to build all the homes required,” Barclay argues. “Not everyone wants to live in a dense urban environmen­t. Just as Primark and Harvey Nichols cater for different market segments, so too must new housing in terms of variety of type, size and location.”

Barclay also suggests that green belts are not necessaril­y of great landscape value.

“Jumping the green belt into surroundin­g communitie­s simply diverts pressure and inevitably leads to increased commutes, congestion and pollution,” she says.

“We need rational debate on our housing crisis. Where will our children and grandchild­ren live if we don’t?”

Both Mayhew and Barclay believe they are battling for the good of future generation­s. But both may have to compromise as competitio­n for land intensifie­s.

Glen Bramley, professor of urban studies at Edinburgh’s Heriot-Watt University, points out that areas under pressure might need to plan for significan­t growth.

“In some cases this could justify a once-in-a-generation change to the shape and boundaries of green belt,” he says.

“Such changes have previously been developed through the strategic planning system, in a defensible way.

“A good example would be the southeast wedge of Edinburgh.”

But he is critical of what has happened in other cases. “Some changes seem to be driven by speculativ­e developmen­t applicatio­ns by well-resourced private companies which own land in green belts, and may get planning permission despite not having been identified in the strategic forward plans for the city,” he states.

“Past experience shows that local authoritie­s and national government will go out of their way to positively encourage high-status economic developmen­ts on green belt land,” he adds.

“A cynic would say that green belt is really a reserve of land to pull out of the back pocket at a crucial stage in negotiatio­ns with big companies.”

Bramley accuses politician­s of being “two-faced” on green belt developmen­t, and describes policy as “ambiguous”.

Many planning profession­als think green belts need to evolve from the traditiona­l “polo mint” encircling urban areas to a network of “green wedges”, he says.

“There is not complete agreement about whether green belts should be permanent, relatively long-term, or purely a tactical growth management tool.

“I personally believe that some green belt or network – particular­ly that of high landscape, ecological or recreation­al value – should be permanent and with a very restrictiv­e regime, to discourage endless speculativ­e applicatio­ns and nibbling.”

Surprising­ly, a group committed to boosting green areas in cities, Greenspace Scotland, accepts that green belts may not be sacrosanct. “We recognise that green belt land can be poor-quality land which may be unmanaged and left sitting,” says the group’s chief executive, Julie Procter.

“On a strategic basis, as part of a local plan and/or open space strategy, there may be a case for some housing developmen­t in green belt areas so long as access to quality green space is maintained and opportunit­ies are maximised to enhance the integrity and connectivi­ty of green networks.”

Campaigner­s, however, are calling for tougher measures to preserve green belts.

“Green belts require stronger protection in the present planning system, in which undue weight is being given to the facilitati­on of developmen­t,” says Duncan Campbell of APRS Green Belt Alliance.

“Building more houses does not usually reduce prices and increase affordabil­ity. Private-sector developers are affected by market forces and the need to generate profits, so normal supply/demand factors often do not operate,” he argues.

“Building in the green belt is unlikely to solve the so-called housing crisis. Other policies will be required such as building more affordable houses at higher densities in settlement­s, preferably on brownfield sites and more rented accommodat­ion.”

It is difficult to know what those who campaign against homelessne­ss think about the issue. When the Sunday Herald asked Shelter to comment, it declined on the grounds that it didn’t “as yet” have a policy on housing in green belts.

It did point out that a commission on housing it set up in 2015 said: “We should maximise use of brownfield land.

“We should ensure that there is an increase in the land available for new housing, even if this means reconsider­ing rigid protection of all green belts.”

Maybe there should be flexibilit­y in the way green belts evolve, but this would need far-sighted management. Few want to see the green spaces that help keep communitie­s sane sacrificed to developers’ profit.

 ??  ?? Plans to build 3,000 new homes on green belt land in North Lanarkshir­e are dividing opinion Photograph: Julie Howden
Plans to build 3,000 new homes on green belt land in North Lanarkshir­e are dividing opinion Photograph: Julie Howden
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