Features
Climate change is having a corrosive impact on our coastlines – and the people that live by them. As Dr Tim Poate and Andrew Austen explain, it’s down to planners to hold the line. But how?
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01.01.2014Concerned at the impact that betting shops and hot food takeaways can have on the social values and health of their communities, local authorities have started to fight back
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01.01.2014
Mark H Durkan’s decision to withdraw Northern Ireland’s putative planning bill in October has been dramatised by the media as a bombshell at best and a catastrophe at worst.
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01.11.2013Not content with ploughing through reams of national planning policy guidance to update it, chair of the National Housing Federation Lord Taylor is on a mission to...
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01.11.2013
A surge in applications to convert office space into houses is provoking premature consternation in local authorities – and crunch time will be in 2016, finds The Planner
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01.11.2013
Sir Terry Farrell's all-encompassing review of government's role in the design of the built environment is far from the first of its kind. How might this one differ from its predecessors?
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The A379 between Torcross and Strete in south Devon is a good example of a location where a Coastal Change Management Area designation could provide clear guidance on vital infrastructure exposed to storm damage and sea level rise
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Climate change is having a corrosive impact on our coastlines – and the people that live by them. As Dr Tim Poate and Andrew Austen explain, it’s down to planners to hold the line. But how?
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A growing body of evidence suggests that green space has tangible health and economic benefits. Economist Caroline Vexler explains why now is the time for planners to focus on the case for green space
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21 January
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21 January
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21 January