Capita Symonds Website - Day Two at Ecobuild 2010
 
Skip Links
 

Day Two at Ecobuild 2010

Capita Symonds held its first special breakfast debate - ‘Changing the DNA of Community Regeneration’ – at its Cityscape ‘green cube’ on the second day of Ecobuild 2010.
 
Guest speakers Joe Duckworth - CEO of Newham Council (which has most of the Olympic 2010 infrastructure within its boundaries); Chris Brown - CEO of Igloo Regeneration; and urban designer and regeneration consultant Liz Kessler, analysed how to balance the need to generate economic value and attract investment with delivering social value and sustainable lifestyles.

Chris Brown of Igloo Regeneration began by asserting his hopes that urban regeneration practice will soon ‘turn on its head’ with politicians finally moving towards an approach - after 30 years of ‘top down’ urban regeneration - where more developmental power is given to either Local Authorities or, more importantly, communities themselves.

Chris went on to reiterate the importance, and benefits, of involving local communities in major schemes by discussing his work on the Channel 4 featured ‘Castleford Project’ as well as a major scheme in Brentford, West London. In both instances local communities were engaged by the Local Authority to input their ideas into the developmental plans, resulting in award-winning work which was very different to what might have been produced had the communities views not been heard.

Unfortunately, as Chris pointed out, there are no tools in the current planning system to really help local communities make their own plans for a locality happen. Therefore, in his own ‘Election Manifesto’ wish-list, Chris made two major points. The first was that any major development site should be masterplanned by the community as a matter of course (or law). The second, more radical, idea was that, instead of one developer, putting forward plans for a scheme, there should be four or five involved in a competition with schemes assessed on criteria such as design quality. This would revolutionise the industry and force engagement with the community to produce better, more sustainable designs.

Chris Brown at Ecobuild 2010
Chis Brown at Ecobuild

Liz Kessler told of her work on the EC1 New Deal for Communities (NDC) project in a deprived area of Islington, North London – a sometimes bleak and colourless area dotted with council estates. After six years’ hard work, the NDC project is having a hugely positive effect on the area.

Liz works as public space co-ordinator for the project and, although work remains to be done, a massive amount of improvement has been seen. For example, the area’s parks have been improved with five being completely redesigned while 14 of the area’s streets and public spaces have been totally transformed, particularly for pedestrians (one of the key points in the development’s research was that local people wanted to be ‘out and about’). Four of the council estates have also had extensive landscaping to improve the areas and spaces around the buildings, making them more accessible and enabling residents to enjoy their surroundings. Landscaping and green areas are also key - Liz has found that time and time again communities say they want to green areas.

Liz also reiterated the point that you cannot get good design if you do not engage with the community which will be affected by the designs. For example, steering groups made up of the local community have played an integral part in Liz’s work, leading to ideas such as reviving and expanding the local market and even employing local people to work on the redevelopment.

One final point was that Local Authorities need to be more geared enough towards delivery. Liz has found that too often input is required from a plethora of various departments with rigid managerial hierarchies.

Liz Kessler at Ecobuild 2010
Liz Kessler at Ecobuild

The morning’s final speaker - Joe Duckworth of Newham Council – told of the plans that are making the borough one of the most exciting in the UK.

He began by discussing how Local Authorities have the most important role as placeshapers, having the ultimate responsibility in making sure communities are sustainable. The reasons are simple – direct accountability through the ballet box and the fact that it is a Local Authority who will, particularly with regards to 2012, have to oversee new developments in the long-term. He also mentioned the key role of the private sector, not just architects and developers but in terms of developing new business models and encouraging wealth creation.

Newham has a raft of exciting developments and ideas, highlighted by the fact that The Olympics is only the area’s fourth biggest regeneration scheme. As London rolls forever eastward Stratford is also fast becoming a metropolitan centre for the city with an airport and internal station. The borough even has the youngest population in Europe with just under 50% aged under 25.

It does however face a unique set of challenges - it is the sixth most deprived borough in the country; 18,000 people in the Borough have never worked; it has the fastest growing birth-rate in the country, doubling since 2006 (they’ve had to put in 70 temporary reception classrooms in their schools); and average size of a Junior school is 700 pupils.

What’s more, 25% of the population moves every single year (in some wards it’s 40%) so that every time the borough creates a middle class…it moves. This level of churn destabilises the area and can cause problems, a point highlighted by the fact that for every station passed going eastbound on the Jubilee line, life expectancy amongst the local populace decreases by one year.

Joe Duckworth talks at Ecobuild 2010
Joe Duckworth at Ecobuild

But the outlook is overwhelmingly positive – it has one of the biggest BSF/PCP programmes in the UK; GCSE results A-C improved by 6.2% this year, and the £22bn investment will give an unmissable opportunity to bridge London’s ‘west-east divide’. Newham also successfully encompasses a myriad of religions, races and nationalities being one of the UK’s most tolerant areas - 90% of residents enjoy living next to those of different backgrounds.

Initiatives such as training academies to develop the local communities’ skills are also providing a huge boost in providing jobs (of the 110,000 people who work in Canary Wharf, just 6000 live in the local community – a situation that has to change).

The speakers generated an interesting debate on ways in which we can ‘change the DNA of community generation’ and let our audience with plenty to consider as they made their way to the morning conference sessions on day two of a very well attended Ecobuild 2010.

More information

 

Bookmark and Share