Urban landscapes of abandonment and sustainable regeneration of inner city sreas: the case of Newcastle Gateshead, UK
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26253/heal.uth.ojs.aei.2007.171Keywords:
Urban design, Inner cities, Low demand housing, AbandonmentAbstract
Newcastle Gateshead in common with other industrial cities in northern England steadily lost population during the post-war period up to the 1990s. Much migration was in response to losses in traditional industries; however, within the conurbation there was also migration from inner city areas to more suburban and rural locations. The result was a "loose" urban housing market with an overall surplus of housing stock. The outcomes of this process were unevenly spread, however and affected neighbourhoods very differently. In the worst cases, areas spiralled out of control into decline and abandonment. Meanwhile, the thrust of UK government policy on housing design and location is to get more people to live in urban, higher density, better quality, developments on reused brownfield land. Can such policies really succeed in places where there is low demand for housing and large numbers of existing properties lie empty and abandoned?
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