New towns in the United Kingdom
The new towns in the United Kingdom were planned under the powers of the New Towns Act 1946 and later acts to relocate populations in poor or bombed-out housing following the Second World War. They were developed in three waves. Later developments included the expanded towns: existing towns which were substantially expanded to accommodate what was called the "overspill" population from densely populated areas of deprivation.
Designated new towns were removed from local authority control and placed under the supervision of a development corporation. These corporations were later disbanded and their assets split between local authorities and, in England, the Commission for New Towns.
Historical precedents
Garden cities
- Letchworth, Hertfordshire.
- Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire.
Overspill estates
- Out-county London County Council housing developments, of which Becontree, Dagenham, was the largest. It was built in the 1920s and 1930s.
- Seacroft in Leeds was built from 1934 when Leeds City Council bought 1,000 acres for municipal housing, and after World War II the majority of houses and blocks of flats were built. The council had planned for Seacroft to be a "satellite town within the city boundary"
- Wythenshawe was built on former rural land in the north of Cheshire between the 1920s and early 1970s to rehouse families from the inner city slums of Manchester as an overspill estate. Other Manchester overspill estates include Hattersley, Gamesley, and Haughton Green.
- Castlemilk, Drumchapel, Easterhouse and Pollok in Glasgow.
- Castle Vale in Birmingham, which was built in the 1960s in the extreme north-east of the city.
England
First wave
The first wave was intended to help alleviate the housing shortages following the Second World War, beyond the green belt around London. A couple of sites in County Durham were also designated. These designations were made under the New Towns Act 1946.- Stevenage, Hertfordshire
- Crawley, Sussex
- Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire
- Harlow, Essex
- Newton Aycliffe, County Durham
- Peterlee, County Durham
- Welwyn Garden City and Hatfield, Hertfordshire
- Basildon, Essex
- Bracknell, Berkshire
- Corby, Northamptonshire
Second wave
- Skelmersdale, Lancashire
- Dawley New Town, Shropshire
- Redditch, Worcestershire
- Runcorn, Cheshire
- Washington, Tyne and Wear
Third wave
The third and last wave of new towns allowed for additional growth chiefly further north from the previous London new towns, with a few developments between Liverpool and Manchester, namely "Central Lancashire" and Warrington. Dawley New Town was redesignated as Telford New Town, with a much larger area, as overspill for Birmingham and nearby towns including Wolverhampton. About halfway between Birmingham and London was the new town of Milton Keynes, while the existing town of Northampton was expanded. In East Anglia, the city of Peterborough was designated as a new town to accommodate overspill from London.- Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire
- Peterborough, Cambridgeshire
- Northampton, Northamptonshire
- Warrington, Cheshire
- Telford, Shropshire
- Central Lancashire, Lancashire
Other developments outside the scheme
No new towns have been formally designated since 1970, but several new large scale developments have been founded:
- Cambourne, Cambridgeshire
- Bar Hill, Cambridgeshire
- South Woodham Ferrers, Essex
- Ebbsfleet, Kent
- Wixams, Bedfordshire
- Sherford, Devon
- Northstowe, Cambridgeshire
- Cranbrook, Devon
Future developments
On 13 May 2007, chancellor Gordon Brown, who became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom the following month, announced he would designate 10 new "eco-towns" to ease demand for low-cost housing. The towns, around 20,000 population each—at least 5,000 homes—are planned to be "carbon-neutral" and will use locally generated sustainable-energy sources. Only one site was identified in the announcement: the former Oakington Barracks in Cambridgeshire—the already planned Northstowe development. Local councils will be invited to provide sites for the remaining four towns.The Town and Country Planning Association is advising the government on the criteria and best practice in developing the eco-towns by producing a series of "worksheets" for developers.
In September 2014 the CBI called for all political parties to commit to building 10 new towns and garden cities to get to grips with the country's housing shortage.
Wales
- Cwmbran
- Newtown
Modern developments outside the scheme
- Coed Darcy
- Tircoed
Scotland
- East Kilbride
- Glenrothes
- Cumbernauld
- Livingston
- Irvine
- Stonehouse
Modern developments outside the scheme
- Ravenscraig
- Chapelton of Elsick
- Tweedbank, new village built in the 1970s on a greenfield site in the central Scottish Borders.
- Erskine and Inchinnan, small new town developed in the 1970s and 1980s in Renfrewshire.
- Dalgety Bay, small new town developed in the 1970s and 1980s in Fife.
Future developments
- An Camas Mòr: new settlement proposed in the Cairngorms National Park
- Blindwells: new settlement proposed adjacent to Tranent in East Lothian
- Calderwell: new settlement proposed adjacent to East Calder and Livingston in West Lothian
- Durieshill: new settlement proposed in Stirling Council area adjacent to Plean
- Forestmill: new settlement proposed in Clackmannanshire in close proximity to the Fife Council administrative boundary
- Oudenarde: new settlement proposed adjacent to the Bridge of Earn in Perthshire
- Owenstown: new settlement proposed in the South Lanarkshire area to the south of Lanark
- Shawfair: new settlement proposed in SE Edinburgh spanning the City of Edinburgh Council and Midlothian Council administrative boundaries
- Tornagrain: new settlement proposed to the south of Inverness Airport in the Highland Council area
Northern Ireland
The New Towns Amendment Act 1968 was passed to enable the establishment of the Londonderry Development Commission to replace the County Borough and rural district of Londonderry, and implement the Londonderry Area Plan. On 3 April 1969, the development commission took over the municipal functions of the two councils, the area becoming Londonderry Urban District.
In July 2002 the Select Committee on Transport, Local Government and the Regions assessed the effectiveness of the new towns and concluded that:
While many New Towns have been economically successful, most now are experiencing major problems. Their design is inappropriate to the 21st Century. Their infrastructure is ageing at the same rate and many have social and economic problems. Many are small local authorities which do not have the capacity to resolve their problems. Their attempts to manage the towns are complicated by the role played by English Partnerships which still has major landholdings and other outstanding interests.
The new towns are no longer new and many of the quickly built houses have reached the end of their design life. The masterplans dictated low density development with large amounts of open space, and housing segregated from jobs, shopping and business services. These created a car dependency and are now not considered sustainable. Low density developments are expensive to maintain. Roads and sewers are in need of expensive upgrades.