News

15Mar 2026

Planning in London, Issue 136, Jan-Mar 2026

15th March 2026|Categories: Planning in London|Tags: , , , , |

Issue 136 of Planning in London, the journal of the London Planning and Development Forum, has been published, covering the period Jan-Mar 2026.  London Forum has a subscription arrangement whereby our members may read it.

A useful AI-generated summary can be downloaded (included in website searches).

Table of contents:

  • Planning Enables; It Doesn’t Deliver — the editors’ critique of housing delivery failure.
  • New Kinds of Suburbia — Mallett on suburban densification and design-led approaches.
  • Key Opinion Pieces [more…]
13Mar 2026

Demo on affordable housing crisis

13th March 2026|Categories: Updates|Tags: , , , |

There is to be a demonstration on Saturday 18th April about the crisis of lack of social housing and of secure affordable private rented accommodation making it almost impossible now for most people in London to get any decent housing.
Enough appropriate housing which people can afford is a basic necessity of modern life and has to be provided as part of basic public infrastructure.

[more…]

11Mar 2026

National Planning Policy Framework consultation response

11th March 2026|Categories: What We've Said|Tags: , , , , , , , |

We’ve responded to the December 2025 NPPF consultation, which closed on 12th March 2026. This substantial piece of work, contributed to by many subject matter experts, is posted in the ‘what we’ve said‘ archive as usual, and directly linked below for your convenience.  It is now fully indexed for searching too.

We are critical of some of the new decision making policies.

London Forum response to NPPF consultation December 2025

11Mar 2026

Chief Planning Officer’s newsletter

11th March 2026|Categories: Updates|Tags: , , |

A recent newsletter by Chief Planner, Joanna Averley, in MHCLG to local authorities’ planning officers is here.

It includes:-

  • New Plan-Making System
  • Funding to support Local Plan implementation
  • Compulsory purchase update
  • Using AI to summarise consultation responses, see this video
  • Adapting Historic Buildings for Energy and Carbon Efficiency
  • Developers to comply with tree felling regulations
10Mar 2026

Densifying the Suburbs – A presenter’s Insight

10th March 2026|Categories: Insights|Tags: , , , , |

Our President, Ben Derbyshire, provides his Insights into our recent Densifying the Suburbs event.

Ben Derbyshire

I welcomed the invitation to speak at an open meeting of the Forum, ‘Densifying the Suburbs’ alongside Professor Tony Travers of UCL and local planners, Paul Lewin and Justin Carr from Waltham Forest and Brent councils respectively.  My challenge – most people who have time to participate in their local civic societies will already be well housed, so what, I asked, should be our collective response to fellow citizens who are not?… Read more...

09Mar 2026

Website search improvements

9th March 2026|Categories: Updates|Tags: , |

We’ve long had an effective search facility on the website for current news, Insights, events and other pages.  Last week there was an opportune moment to invest in an important additional feature to support our institutional knowledge: Search for our archive of several hundred pdf files

This is significant, in that the entire archive is now indexed and searchable, most notably ‘What We’ve said‘ since 2011, all reports and pdf attachments, plus historic editions of Insights and NewsForum.Read more...

06Mar 2026

Historic buildings needing upgrade

6th March 2026|Categories: Updates|Tags: , |

The Duke of Westminster, one of Britain’s biggest landowners, has criticised strict planning rules affecting upgrades to historic homes.

He owns 1,750 listed buildings as part of a property empire that includes some of London’s most impressive period buildings in Mayfair and Belgravia. Many require essential updating, not least for energy purposes.

In the report ‘Retrofit or Ruin‘ by Capital Economics, the Duke’s Grosvenor property company criticises “slow, complex and inconsistent rules” that risk leaving England’s 350,000 listed buildings “uninhabitable, unaffordable and ultimately redundant”.
Read more...
06Mar 2026

West London Orbital

6th March 2026|Categories: Updates|Tags: , , , |

A post on the IanVisits website explains how the West London Orbital could run up to six trains an hour and provide ten new interchanges with rail and Underground services, alongside four new stations at Old Oak Common Lane, Neasden, Harlesden and Lionel Road, while some existing stations along the route would be upgraded to accommodate the new service. Funds have been allocated for the next stage of planning.

The project’s backers say the new rail link could support the construction of more than 25,000 homes and 11,500 jobs.

04Mar 2026

Community housing in Brent 100% affordable

4th March 2026|Categories: Updates|Tags: , , |

The Architects’ Journal published a report on a block of 19 social rent homes proposed by the non-profit, volunteer-run Brent Community Land Trust (CLT) for a site in Brentfield Road, Stonebridge, Brent. The 19-home scheme aims to give local people the “opportunity to remain in the neighbourhood”.

The plot for the scheme was identified in collaboration with Brent Council for the CLT’s Art Deco-inspired modernist housing block designed by Bell Phillips Architects, replacing a derelict site of garages.… Read more...

27Feb 2026

A new Victims’ Code

27th February 2026|Categories: Updates|Tags: |

The Government has opened a consultation to 30th April 2026 to seek views on proposed updates to The Code of Practice for Victims of Crime in England and Wales (Victims’ Code). The Victims’ Code focuses on victims’ rights and sets out the minimum standard that organisations must provide to victims of crime.

The Ministry of Justice website has relevant links at the bottom of the page, including to the draft new Victim’s code

There is a paper on the support that young victims of crime should get.

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  • Statutory consultees jigsaw - inspired by image by Markus Winkler [Unsplash] and made with AI

Statutory Consultees

13th January 2026|

Statutory consultees play an important role in the planning application process by providing expert advice on significant environmental, transport, safety, and heritage issues.  There are currently 13 organisations that local planning authorities (LPAs) must consult about specialist issues when they receive relevant planning applications, from the Environment Agency and National Highways to Historic England.

Their role is very important, but there is widespread agreement that the system is not working well, causing needless duplication of effort and delays in making decisions.… Read more...

  • Using AI in your Civic Society

    📆 Thu 30th April | 18:30 - 20:30
    🚩 77 Cowcross Street, EC1M 6EL (map)
    Artificial Intelligence is everywhere in the news and in business these days – we even used it to generate the image for this event. How can it help your civic society ?  Do you need to be an expert? (No!)  Civic societies are often under-resourced, and at this event we’ll show that with a little knowledge, illustrated with examples, AI can bolster your resources in several useful ways, without necessarily spending a penny. Please book here ( https://www.londonforum.org.uk/events/using-ai-in-your-civic-society#booking ). Agenda Firstly by way of introduction, we’ll look at some novel…

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