Rolling posts on UK planning law, policy, appeals, plan examinations…
Summer madness: what have you missed?
From M&S to 2nd staircases to nutrient neutrality - a summary of a jam-packed summer.
The basics #15 - rivers, embargoes and Brexit
What the High Court told us last week about nutrient neutrality post-Brexit.
Gove, beauty and a curious tale from Kent
What Michael Gove’s recent refusal of a housing scheme in Cranbrook tells us about the beauty agenda.
“No Minister” - 8 clangers at the Select Committee
The Planning Minister’s depressing appearance before the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee.
Time up, pens down: what we thought of the draft NPPF
4 big points of consensus in responses to the NPPF consultation.
The basics #14 - what we keep getting wrong about section 73
Back to basics on “varying” planning permissions.
Notes on reform: what’s the NPPF *for*?
The most depressing thing about the consultation draft NPPF.
🏆 The #Planoraks 2022 🏆 - worst planning reform of the year
The voting is closed, the judges have deliberated. Time for some gongs.
Notes from the Green Belt: welcome to Basildon
What we can learn from a recent housing appeal in the Green Belt outside Billericay.
When you can’t build both #2 - the big point in *Hillside*
The key headlines from the Supreme Court’s judgment in Hillside.
The problem with “Investment Zones”
The big challenge facing the Government’s latest proposal for planning reform.
Notes from the hustings: the end of “Stalinist housing targets”?
Why local housing need numbers aren’t Stalinist. And why they matter.
The basics #12 - “valued landscapes” vs. valued landscapes
What is a “valued landscape” and why does it matter.
#LURB - the end of 5 year housing land supply?
The real problem with 5 year housing land supply.
Ask-a-planorak #10 - Simon Gallagher, Director of Planning at DLUHC
10 questions on the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill with the Director of Planning at DHLUC
All change please: the new test at the heart of the “Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill”
The radical change which may spell the end of the presumption in favour of the development plan.
We need a plan: getting old, and the “Levelling Up” White Paper
Why it’s so hard to get excited about another white paper.