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Latest Insights
The Freedom Pass, its Impact and Costs
London’s Freedom Pass was introduced in 1973, and it has had a profound impact on the lives of Londoners, particularly, of course, those with a disability and those over state-pensionable age. But its very success may cast its future into doubt as the numbers and proportions of older people among London’s residents continues to increase, and as fares rise ahead of inflation. Eligibility Eligibility has changed somewhat over the years. Until April 2010, the pass was available to any London resident over the age of 60. Since then, the age threshold has risen in line with the state-pension age for women; it is currently 66, though it could rise further in future. Residents between 60 and 65 can pay £20 for a 60+ Oyster card, with all the benefits of the Freedom Pass within, but not outside, London. Eligibility for disabled people covers a ...
Will the next London Plan rise to the city’s real challenges?
This article was first published in Housing Today. Ben Derbyshire reflects on Sadiq Khan’s latest policies to boost housebuilding in the capital. You could be forgiven for thinking, following Sadiq Khan’s volte face on building in the green belt, that Londoners would be all over this issue like a rash. Far from it, if the mood among members of the London Society and the London Forum of Amenity and Civic Societies at a meeting convened on 13 May is anything to go by. The two leading London societies wanted to give members the opportunity to respond to the emerging strategy by the capital’s planners, set out in the recently published mayor of London’s consultation document, Towards a New London Plan. Our meeting was the first public presentation in the roll-out of consultation by the mayor’s planning team – quite a coup. I took the ...
Member News : How to contribute
In an earlier article, I mentioned that two-thirds of member societies are already represented on the new live member news page, which in turn provides selected articles for our weekly email to the whole membership, allowing members to share their news and knowledge across London. We select stories that we feel are particularly newsworthy, or of benefit by way of information sharing to a significant part of our membership, and we assume you think this is a good idea too. Our aggregated membership is over 50,000 Londoners, so this could be significant. How can your society join in? We just need to know the address of your RSS feed so that we can include it. A 'feed' automatically produces a computer-readable version of your website's latest articles or news, and most modern websites already have an automatic one. One-third of societies are not represented, ...
What’s Happening to London’s Population?
An Historical Introduction London’s population peaked in the 1930s, reaching about 8.6 million in 1939. For the next half century it fell steadily, to 6.8 million in the 1980s, before beginning to rise again, to over 9.1 million now. But the experiences of inner London (broadly, the area governed by the London County Council (LCC) from 1889 to 1963) and of outer London (broadly, the areas added to the county when the Greater London Council (GLA) was created in 1965) have differed greatly. Inner London’s population fell rapidly by over 40%, from 4.6 million to 2.6 million between the 1930s and the 1980s. By contrast, the outer London population rose from around 3.5 million in the 1930s to 4.5 million in the 1960s, before falling slightly to 4.2 million in the 1980s. Since then, both inner and outer London have grown by over a ...
What’s happening in the Old Kent Road?
The Old Kent Road was designated by the Mayor in 2016 as an Opportunity Area. It is the subject of two videos ...
Ealing flats left empty
Three hundred luxury flats in the Friary Park development in Acton remain unoccupied. Sean Fletcher, a local resident, criticises in his latest ...
Planning Committee Reforms: Stop the Attack on Local Democracy!
The London Forum has issued a scathing response to the Government’s recent consultation on Planning Committee reforms. The proposals were branded as ...
Architects should rejoice that Britain’s latest new towns aren’t new towns at all
By Ben Derbyshire, chair at HTA Design, former RIBA president, and President of the London Forum.
I don’t generally play for laughs, but [more…]
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Planning, Environment and Transport committee meeting
📅 Thu 11th June | 14:00 - 16:00
🚩 Room B1 70 Cowcross St, EC1M 6EJ (map)


