Critically examine the development of Town and Country Planning in the United Kingdom

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“Critically examine the development of Town and Country Planning in the United Kingdom”

Town and country planning or urban and regional planning as its otherwise known, can be defined as ‘planning with a spatial, or geographical, component, in which the general objectives is to provide for a spatial structure of activities (or of land uses) which in some way is better than the pattern that would exist without planning’ (Hall. 2002). Cherry (1974) expands this by stating town planning is an activity centred on land, land use and activities and the development process embedded within a distinct social context and takes place with economic and political systems.

Hall (2002) claims town and country planning emerged in response to specific social and economic problems that were simulated by the Industrial Revolution at the end of the eighteenth century. Sutcliffe (1980) agrees, stating that the foundation period of modern planning was the century of rapid industrialisation and urbanisation which culminated in the First World War. However in order to fully recognise this, it is necessary to consider what happened prior to then in terms of planning. Element of planning are accepted to exist before industrialisation; since ancient times, towns had been laid out by authority, public facilities had been provided, and regulations to control private building had been enforced (Sutcliffe. 1980), as its claimed without such planning towns were ‘liable to discourage prospective residents, turn away trade, burn down and lose their populations in sweeping epidemics’.

Even in ancient and medieval times towns were planned ‘in the sense that their existence and their location were laid down consciously by some ruler or some group of merchants; among this group, a large proportion even had formal ground plans with a strong element of geometric regularity’ (Hall. 2002). It is widely acknowledges that the greatest flowering of formal town planning before the Industrial Revolution came in the Baroque era in Europe, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. At this time, Britain had no absolute monarchy resulting in the aristocracy and the new merchant class dominating the growth of cities and determined their form. This resulted in a different but distinctive form of town planning from the rest of Europe. Hall (2002) highlights Bath as the best example of eighteenth century British town planning, as until then it was a small medieval town, but due to the new enthusiasm for spa cures among the aristocracy it was transformed. However as Tarn (1980) critically claims, the ‘British attitude to towns in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries show a clear leaning towards a picturesque rather than a baroque sense of design, towards the semi-formal rather than the formal, to such and extent as to suggest a national characteristic of deliberately underplaying one’s architectural hand’.

Although the industrial revolution is agreed to have kick-started planning as it is known today, at first it had no striking effect on urban growth as it dispersed industry out of the town and into the open countryside, creating new industrial towns developed from often almost nothing (Hall. 2002). The industrial towns brushed aside what Tarn (1980) claims was a previously weak tradition of urban design of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, being replaced with a contrast between rich man’s suburb on the periphery and the inner tangle of housing and industry. In the early industrial society, people needed to live near to their work and working class ghettos were created (Tarn 1980).

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Growth patterns were extraordinary in this period, as people flooded to these areas from the countryside. As Hall (2002) claims, the towns provided economic opportunities but the social arrangement was incapable of meeting needs for shelter, for elementary public services or for health treatment. The growth of the towns were motivated by the interaction of industrialist and speculative building with as Tarn (1980) states, ‘the housing was clearly related to known need and carefully pitched at the appropriate level of the market’. Consequently the housing for workers built extensively at this time ‘cannot be regarded as planned development in ...

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