Planning matters

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A New Political Era in Wales: What It Means for Planning and Tourism
For the first time in decades, Wales finds itself under a non-Labour-led Government. While the shift in leadership was not entirely unexpected, the introduction of a new proportional representation system meant that the final outcome was far from certain.
Plaid Cymru has emerged as the largest party in the Senedd, albeit without an overall majority. The party has previously held formal and informal roles in governance during Labour’s tenure, but this marks its first time leading the Government. With that comes both opportunity and challenge—particularly for the tourism sector that is integral to Wales’ future.
With only a short time since the Cabinet was announced, we remain within those critical early days where delivery priorities are being set and the direction defined. To date, there have been no new major announcements specifically targeting the tourism sector. As a result, much of this insight must be drawn from Plaid Cymru’s Manifesto[1] commitments. This blog looks at these commitments, how it aligns with the proposed changes to the planning system and what operators, landowners and developers might do as they evolve development proposals.
 

Reading Between the Lines of the Manifesto

 

One of Plaid Cymru’s five key priorities centres on “unleashing the potential of the Welsh economy” and creating well-paid jobs. While there is a clear underlying ambition to build a more sustainable, higher-value economy, the manifesto stops short of explicitly recognising the planning system as a primary driver of economic growth—something that has been more prominent in UK Government proclamations over the last two years.

Solva Harbour, Pembrokeshire

Instead, the emphasis is on supporting Welsh-owned businesses and establishing a National Development Agency for Wales to drive investment, trade and innovation. A focus on the assets and potential of Wales is not groundbreaking; in the long term, if successful, it will be the basis upon which an independence referendum will be held. Plaid Cymru has ruled out such a referendum in this Senedd term but the new First Minister, Rhun Ap Iorweth, is not shy in his position that this would be the ultimate goal.

 

Tourism: Recognised, But Understated

 

Tourism is acknowledged as an important sector within the Manifesto, with a commitment to promoting Wales as a “top quality destination”. It highlights the importance of sustainable tourism that benefits communities, the environment, and Welsh culture and language.
However, this recognition feels somewhat muted when set against the scale of the sector. With an average of one in nine people[2] in Wales employed in tourism and hospitality, its economic significance is arguably underplayed, particularly in areas such as Pembrokeshire and Anglesey where one in five people are employed in the tourism sector.
That said, there are some practical commitments:
  • The 182-day threshold for holiday accommodation will remain under review, with potential new exceptions for certain types of accommodation;

  • Visitor levies will be retained, with a focus on ensuring revenues are reinvested into local services and enhancing the visitor experience[3]; and,

  • A forthcoming review of the Visit Wales model to support tourism and promote careers is also expected.
Delivering on the work from the last Senedd term, new registration requirements for short-term accommodation will come into force from October 2026[4]. Providers offering stays of 31 nights or fewer will need to register with the Welsh Revenue Authority by 31 March 2027. While registration is free, the resulting dataset is expected to provide valuable insights for local authorities, particularly for planning policy and local development plans, and for businesses looking to grow and invest to meet the needs of visitors to Wales.
 

A Stronger Voice from Government

 

The Government has signalled a more assertive stance in its Plenary speech[5]. Speaking in the Senedd, Adam Price, Cabinet Minister for Enterprise, Connectivity and Energy —whose portfolio includes tourism, hospitality, and economic strategy—described tourism as a key economic sector with significant growth potential. He wants to see an increase the proportion of international visitors choosing Wales, alongside a commitment to build a closer, more collaborative relationship with the tourism industry.
None of this provides guarantees for the sector and the financial picture for the Welsh Government to deliver on all its commitments will be difficult. Reinforcing the tourism sector as part of the foundational economy should have greater priority alongside looking for ways to diversify the economy in a way that is vital to the people of Wales and its environment, such as through the delivery of affordable and market housing and renewable infrastructure.

 

Planning Reform: Evolution, Not Revolution

 

Hafan y Môr, Pwllheli

The planning system will be integral to such development and the Manifesto suggests changes will be made. How will these affect the development industry, and particularly tourism?
At a headline level, no radical overhaul is proposed for tourism-specific planning policy so far. However, several planning reforms could have meaningful implications for tourism development that requires engagement with the planning system:

  • Stronger community involvement: A more community-centred approach is intended to give local voices greater influence over planning decisions and priorities.

  • Earlier pre-application consultation: Developers of major schemes are expected to have to engage with stakeholders earlier in the process. It’s not clear if this would result in formal changes to the pre-application consultation (PAC) process or not but it is fair to say that leaving PAC to just before a planning application is far from effective for the community, applicants or local authorities. A review would be welcome.

  • Welsh language considerations: There will be an increased emphasis on embedding the Welsh language within the planning system in rolling out the Commission for Welsh-speaking Committees’ recommendations on town and county planning[6], which includes a review of national policy and Technical Advice Note 13: Tourism.

  • Simplification of process: Efforts will be made to reduce bureaucracy and provide greater certainty around determination timescales. Although, no suggestions of how this will be delivered are published to date.

  • Reform of planning frameworks: Including a new National Development Framework, regional planning and enhanced use of Section 106 agreements to deliver local benefits.

Collectively, these changes point to a planning system that is focused on community aspirations and delivering community value. There is no published detail on how or when any of these changes will take place. None of it will be quick. Until then, the existing legislative and policy context will continue to provide the framework for determining planning applications but maybe communities will feel empowered to engage earlier and perhaps to challenge proposals that they consider are not wanted in their areas.
 

Localisation and Ownership

 

There are strong signals around increasing local ownership within and outside the tourism sector. The prominence given to the Gwynedd and Eryri Sustainable Visitor Economy 2035 strategy reflects a desire to embed sustainable tourism models that prioritise local benefit. The Manifesto commits to introducing a community right to buy local assets when they come up for sale, although there are no details yet to understand how this would work in practice.
This aligns with broader goals of strengthening community resilience and ensuring tourism contributes positively to Welsh identity and place-making.

 

What Should the Sector Do Now?

 

The Parkgate Hotel, Cardiff

For operators, landowners and developers, the evolving policy landscape presents both opportunities and challenges. Key actions for the sector include:
  1. Engage early and often
    Participate in local authority and national consultations and collaborate with industry bodies to shape emerging policy.
     
  2. Influence plan-making
    Ensure the tourism sector is actively represented in local, regional and national strategy development.
     
  3. Strengthen community relationships
    Go beyond statutory consultation requirements—early, meaningful engagement can build support and reduce risk.
     
  4. Demonstrate value
    Planning applications should clearly articulate the economic, social, cultural and environmental benefits of proposals[7].
 

Politics and Pragmatism

 

Without a majority, Plaid Cymru will need to work collaboratively to deliver its agenda. Labour, alongside smaller parties, is likely to play a key role in supporting priorities—particularly where there is already policy alignment. In reality, there is significant common ground between Plaid Cymru and Labour on tourism and planning. Many initiatives—such as the visitor levy and accommodation registration system—are continuations of previous policies.

Llandudno seafront and Great Orme

Reform UK, as the official opposition, will no doubt put under scrutiny proposed changes to the planning system and those that affect the tourist industry. Its own Manifesto[8] appeared to take a stronger position on the value of tourism and hospitality to Wales. In doing so, it wants to see the tourism ‘tax’ scrapped, lowering the threshold to the current 182-days for holiday lets, adjust business rates and cut VAT for certain businesses within the sector. It also wants to change Visit Wales into an independent marketing-led body led by the tourism industry and to create a national tourism strategy to increase visitor numbers and spending as well as ensuring tourism works for residents and strengthens local economies. Whilst there are some clear differences between Plaid Cymru and Reform UK, there is also some degree of alignment at a headline level.
While the change in Government marks a significant political moment, the direction of travel for planning and tourism appears more evolutionary than revolutionary, at least in the short-medium term. The focus on sustainability and community benefit is not new—but it is being sharpened and reframed under Plaid Cymru’s leadership. Looking for cross party consensus across the spectrum will be key for Plaid Cymru if it wants to deliver quickly on its Manifesto commitments.
For those working in the tourism and leisure sectors, success will depend on embracing this shift: engaging with communities, aligning with policy priorities, and demonstrating how development can deliver lasting value for Wales.

 

Footnotes

  

CONTINUE READING

Sound prospects? From Abercrombie to Opportunity Areas to the next London Plan

Sound prospects? From Abercrombie to Opportunity Areas to the next London Plan

Matthew Spry, Isabelle Wall & Ross Raftery 25 Jun 2026
The current fundamental crisis in London’s supply of new homes is widely recognised but its historical resonance is still striking. The drop off in planning and delivery (clearly signposted in the London Plan Review)[1] is now forecast to be the lowest since 1944 (See Figure 1).

Figure 1: Housing Delivery in London 1937 - 2027

Source: GLA data, Centre for Cities and MHCLG published Table 123/217 and Molior January 2026 report.

The causes of near zero housing delivery were different 80+ years ago (not least the role of the Luftwaffe),[2] but London at that point faced a housing crisis – including overcrowding and squalid slums - at least as serious as that faced in 2026. Then, as now, the response was a new plan for London: The Greater London Plan produced by Sir Patrick Abercrombie. It set an agenda that we are living with today.

 

With the draft of the next London Plan (the sixth iteration of its modern incarnation) expected to be published for consultation in July,[3] more signals are emerging on what it will include to address the challenges of 2026, by way of proposals to meet the new local housing need of c.84,000 homes a year.[4]

 

Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe used a series of recent speaking events to trail some of its key policy measures.[5] He largely confirmed what he said in 2025, that a plan to meet the Standard Method target in London is an “intellectual exercise” without a change to the funding approach to infrastructure and affordable housing, given the structural shift in development viability.[6] Although the plan would “absolutely not increase the overall burden of planning policy requirements on development” it would set “high standards” and would also seek higher densities on Green Belt release (at five to six storeys) and around rail stations, something that will surely pose viability and design difficulties on some sites.[7]

 

The “intellectual exercise” positioning – that the London Plan will show how housing targets can be met within London’s boundaries, but only in theory[8] – sets a challenge for the Government, not least given its proposed tests of soundness for Spatial Development Strategies (SDS) in the draft NPPF, scheduled (prior to recent national political ructions) for publication this summer.[9]

 

It also marks a vivid contrast with the policy approach adopted back in 1944.
 

Abercrombie’s Greater London Plan

 

Abercrombie’s Greater London Plan had as its object “to provide the foundations for Greater London upon which homes, work and fresh food can be supplied not only quickly but permanently in full measure.”[10]

 

He delivered a bold and pioneering piece of strategic planning that defined London for its post-war growth and set development patterns and constraints that remain.  His answer combined two core policy instruments, (in)famous in today’s world: the protection of a Green Belt and the creation of New Towns beyond London,[11] linked through a broader vision of decentralisation and growth corridors, set within four rings (see Figure 2). An eagle-eyed observer will note that the Green Belt now is far wider than originally conceived by Abercrombie.[12]

Figure 2: The Greater London Plan’s Four Rings

Source: Greater London Plan 1944

In due course, the opportunity half of the Abercombie concept – New Towns – fell away,[13] but the constraining other half – Green Belt – remained.
 

The Compact City and Opportunity Areas

 

The adopted Spatial Development Strategy for London – the London Plan - was published in 2004, with an express ‘compact city’ model.[14]

 

But this concept for London was not new, carrying forward several planning principles that had been introduced by the post-1986 settlement following abolition of the Greater London Council and which saw formation of LPAC.[15] In its 1988 Strategic Planning Advice for London (which informed RPG3)[16], LPAC said it:

 

“supports the regional objectives of containing development within London and regenerating the older parts of Inner and East London. It accepts that both are a prerequisite to ensure that new development does not conflict with the ... aim to conserve the countryside. [...] Development within London avoids the need to develop greenfield sites outside London and that over-provision for development in ROSE could be wasteful and unnecessary. [...] Housing development must not be at the expense of the Metropolitan Green Belt, Metropolitan Open Land, or other urban open spaces; and housing demand alone should not be sufficient justification in itself for the release of Green Belt or Metropolitan Open Land."[17]

 

So, the current strategy has now run for around four decades, and Figure 1 shows it has not delivered the scale of housing delivery that the Capital now needs. It is based on intensifying the urban area, building at higher densities, initially in Docklands under the LDDC and then in designated Opportunity Areas (Figure 3).

Figure 3: London’s Opportunity Areas

Source: GLA Opportunities Areas Map

These zones have been central to successive London Plans, where they were introduced to “intensify and accommodate substantial growth, especially in economic activity.”[18] In the 2021 London Plan, 275,000 of the 523,000 homes planned for to 2029 were in these areas. Some of the most recognisable feats of housing delivery in London stem from this Opportunity Area thinking; Nine Elms, Greenwich Peninsula, King’s Cross and Olympic Park are examples of what coordinated land assembly/ownership and robust delivery mechanisms can achieve.

 

However, each of the 48 Opportunity Areas have developed – or remained undeveloped – at differing paces. In preparing for the next London Plan, the GLA categorised its Opportunity Areas.[19] and with our interpretation of each, we have identified the remaining housing capacity. Out of the total capacity of c.246,000 homes, our analysis suggests around two thirds (c.169,000) are delayed in their progress, stalled through infrastructure blockers, or perennially nascent (See our interactive graphic as Figure 4 for the categorisation of each - click on each category to identify the relevant capacity and OAs).

Figure 4: Opportunity Area Categorisation

Source: GLA / Lichfields analysis

 

Why do Opportunity Areas fail?

 

By their nature, Opportunity Areas face many challenges, often in combination, which are causing them to stall, broadly across three key themes: a) infrastructure; b) frameworks and coordination; and c) deliverability (See our interactive chart as Figure 5 - click the icons for more information).

Figure 5: Opportunity Areas: Why they fail

Source: GLA / Lichfields analysis

Of these, the most significant barrier is dependence on major infrastructure. In 16 of the 48 areas, housing capacity is tied to transport schemes that remain unfunded, delayed or politically uncertain. New Southgate exemplifies this issue, where its reliance on Crossrail 2 has held back any real growth and it is expected that this will lead to the area’s de-designation.

 

Alongside these ‘big ticket’ infrastructure dependencies, lack of local connectivity has also been a barrier. Even where strategic transport exists, many opportunity areas (around 20 out of 48) are weakened by physical severance, poor pedestrian access and lacking effective cycle links – all of which rely on sufficient development viability to secure investment.

 

In essence, the more deliverable Opportunity Areas have been secured – often with concerted investment efforts.[20]  This leaves the more challenging locations representing a substantial proportion of remaining capacity: areas that are already underway but progressing more slowly (c.84,000 homes) or classified as ‘ready to grow’ but with major barriers unresolved (a further c.52,000 homes). A further c.77,000 homes are not out of the starting blocks or look set to be dropped.

 

Without moves towards more targeted investment, infrastructure delivery and stronger coordination, this potential remains under-realised.
 

The new London Plan: what’s next?

 

The draft NPPF set an expectation that Spatial Development Strategies look ahead a minimum of 20 years.[21] Assuming the Mayor follows this stipulation (which surely makes more sense for a strategic plan than the ten year targets that are automatically set up to fail)[22], then the London Plan needs a positive vision for securing up to 1.69 million homes. Draft NPPF policy PM14 says that for an SDS to be “sound” it should be, inter alia, “effective” where “there is a reasonable prospect that local plans will be capable of identifying site allocations to implement its spatial strategy.” For Local Plans to be sound, Draft Policy PM15 requires them to be “realistic” where “there is a reasonable prospect that its site allocations are capable of being deliverable at the time envisioned.”[23] 

 

An analysis of potential sources of supply points to the major challenge involved in this endeavour (See our interactive chart for Figure 6 - hover over each component for the rationale analysis).

Figure 6: Sources of Supply for 1.69m homes


Source: GLA / Lichfields analysis

 

Even with optimistic assumptions about addressing the current viability challenge; small site capacity (including an uplift based on rolling out the Croydon experiment);[24] strengthened pro-development policies including grey belt and development around ‘well connected’ railway stations; and the residual capacity of all extant opportunity areas and large brownfield sites, there remains a substantial housing gap (perhaps as much as 875k homes) over the next two decades.

 

The social and economic implications of this gap are stark. London Boroughs are facing unprecedented costs – estimated at £5.5m a day – in providing temporary accommodation for homeless households.[25]  The lack of secure housing clearly undermines prospects for young people.

 

The Deputy Mayor’s remarks suggest a SDS for meeting need that is more an “intellectual exercise” than one it considers likely or realistic. This seems intended to set the Mayor of London up for some interesting discussions with HM Treasury and asking likely Prime Minister Burnham (the "King of the North") for more transport investment in a Capital he has not always talked about positively.[26] 

 

If London is to genuinely meet the challenges with a realistic long-term strategy – one with an Abercrombie-esque scale of ambition and boldness – on top of the benefits arising from a more rules-based system and encouraging development of smaller sites, it seems likely to require at least four strategic moves:

 

  1. First, unlocking the existing pipeline. The most immediate gains are likely to come from those homes already in the pipeline in existing Opportunity Area designations and other large sites. Yet, this requires investment and proactivity that the GLA already understands: viability gaps, infrastructure timing, land assembly and delivery coordination to name a few. A credible strategy starts with these identified zones shifting existing capacity into on-the-ground delivery. Easier said than done.

  2. Second, within the GLA boundary and taking account of the 20-year horizon for SDS, creating the next generation of Opportunity Areas, without necessarily any expectation that much is delivered in the short term.  A mix of bold ambition but also realism to focus on creating the right conditions early, including delivery structures, the framework for land assembly and infrastructure planning. The tests of soundness for SDS recognise this.[27] 

  3. Third, the Green Belt needs to be loosened strategically, as the Mayor has signalled he will do.[28] However, the challenge here relates to the Mayor’s expected demand for high densities which pose challenges for viability, the demand for family homes, and the design and landscape considerations often applicable on such sites.[29]  Further, because the SDS cannot allocate Green Belt sites itself, it relies on Local Plans that will not be adopted for some years and this puts their delivery trajectory into the second or third phases of any strategy.

All of the above is needed, but even with an optimistic outlook, this might realistically get London to a position where it is achieving development of around 40-50,000 homes a year. This takes one to the inescapable conclusion that a fourth strategic move is needed, and it is as old as the hills:

  1. Looking beyond the boundary. This was a foundation of Abercrombie’s strategy. It was part of the 1967 Strategic Plan for the South East.[30] Both recognised that London’s problems cannot be solved within London alone. The current London Plan recognises it even if not responding directly: Policy SD2 is designed to frame engagement with the wider South East for future reviews of the Plan and Policy SD3 focuses on potential growth locations outside London.[31] The Inspectors examining the last London Plan said:

    “If London cannot accommodate all of its development needs, the most significant strategic issue facing the wider South East for the coming decades will be how and where to accommodate that growth outside London in a way that will contribute towards achieving sustainable development. Many representors, with a wide variety of interests, have argued that this could and should be achieved. However, it is clear from past experience and evidence about increasing development pressures that areas in the wider South East outside London already face, that there are no easy solutions or clearly identified potential growth locations.”[32]

    All of this was based on an assumption – with evidence - that London would not meet its needs within its boundary, and that there was a requirement to work with the wider South East, even if it was acknowledged at the time that there were no clear mechanisms (or appetite) to do so. A similar argument existed in 1944, in 1967 and it exists now.

    The draft NPPF would require the next London Plan to be positive in seeking to meet needs, but also be appropriate and effective. If it becomes apparent that needs cannot be met, the Mayor will need to show that “stringent efforts have been taken to meet those needs through cooperation with other strategic planning authorities”. Footnote 20 expressly references the Mayor of London as being subject to this test.

    The new London Plan seems likely to adopt a different, entirely inward-facing approach to meeting its needs, just at the moment when – over the M25 - the new architecture for strategic planning is emerging, blinking into the light. There is also a more overt central Government intervention by way of New Towns (albeit not on the scale of post-war programme).[33] Arguably, there is more of a platform – or at least a smaller, more manageable number of interlocutors – for the Mayor to engage on strategic matters than has been the case since 2010.
 

Conclusions

 

London was famously described by William Cobbett as the ‘Great Wen’ – a monstrous entity that drains the life, wealth and population from the rest of Britain. And yet the Capital undisputedly faces an acute housing crisis; authoritative studies on Britain’s poor economic productivity show that addressing the lack of homes – in and around London - is part of any policy to help support an improvement in economic growth, as part of - not instead of - an approach that addresses regional inequality.[34]

 

The Mayor's prospective London Plan – in advancing an ‘intellectual exercise’ capacity-based approach to meet need (at least on paper) within its boundaries that expressly relies on high densities and an ask for public money to address a broken funding model – seems set for a collision course with either HM Treasury or the new NPPF tests of soundness for SDS. Perhaps both.

 

One must assess a plan based on what it says and the evidence on which it is based – and nobody outside the GLA has seen that yet – but realistically the supply it might unlock is unlikely to exceed 40,000 – 50,000 homes per annum. It is difficult to conceive that any Inspectors examining the Plan will do anything other than conclude – as they did in 2019 and in 2014[35] – that London on its own will fail to meet its objectively assessed housing need and that it is necessary – as was the case (albeit in different circumstances) in 1944 and 1967 – to look beyond into the wider South East for solutions. Those solutions must work in parallel with whatever is a realistic outcome from the vision put forward by the Mayor.

Footnotes

 

[1] London Plan Review: Report of Independent Advisers. Lichfields was engaged by-then DLUHC to support the review.

[2] Including the site of Lichfields’ London office which was nearly completely destroyed as shown here.  

[3] As reported here (£). 

[4] Based on the Standard Method for Local Housing Need

[5] This included the Landmark Chambers London Planning Conference – at which one of the authors of this blog also presented some of the analysis that forms the basis of this blog. 

[6] Remarks made to the London Assembly planning and regeneration committee in June 2025, as reported here

[7] Media write-ups of the event include in Planning and OnLondon

[8] Akin to basing a housing target on the largely abstract estimates of urban capacity that were generated by the studies of the late 1990s prepared under the guidance of Tapping the Potential (see here) (see this blog on PPG3 for the history lesson)

[9] Housing Secretary Steve Reed indicated publication “very very shortly” in his remarks to UKREiiF in May 2026 – reported here – but this obviously pre-dates the small matter of a change in Prime Minister, a possible change to Secretary of State, and the Cabinet Secretary’s missive to Departments not to announce any major new policy until a new Prime Minister is in place (£).

[10] Greater London Plan, 1944 Preamble

[11] Green Belt was progressively designated by local authorities. Following the New Towns Act 1946, between 1946 and 1970, 22 New Towns were designated, many of which delivered upwards of 25,000 homes each.

[12] Abercrombie’s Green Belt finished before towns like Guildford, Royal Tunbridge Wells, Chelmsford and St Albans; all of which are now surrounded in whole or in part by the Metropolitan Green Belt.

[13] The New Towns programme ended in the late 1970s, although developments in designated New Towns continued.

[14] This 2017 piece by Duncan Bowie reviews the genesis of the ‘compact city’ approach advocated by Lord Rogers as adviser to Mayor of London Ken Livingstone and expressly sought to meet London’s housing needs within its boundary.  It finds that the concept increased social polarisation and displaced lower income households.

[15] LPAC was the Joint Planning Committee for Greater London. The Local Government Act 1985 required the London Boroughs to establish the committee; it provided advice to the Secretary of State who was responsible for preparing Regional Planning Guidance (RPG3)  An account of the story of LPAC – prepared by Richard Derecki - can be found here

[16] The 1989 iteration of RPG3

[17] Paras 2.5 and 3.12 Strategic Planning Advice for London: Policies for the 1990s October 1988

[18] London Plan 2004 §2.3

[19] The GLA’s evaluation of London’s Opportunity Areas through Pen Portraits:  

[20] Not least, the works for the 2012 Olympics, the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, or the TIF model for Northern Line extension.

[21] Draft Policy PM1 of the December 2025 Consultation Draft NPPF

[22] Relying on implementation by Local Plans that are often not adopted until mid-end of the ten year period and which the NPPF requires to look ahead a minimum of 15-years from adoption, perversely providing more of a strategic outlook than the strategic plan that sits above them.

[23] Draft Policy PM15 of the draft NPPF

[24] The Croydon Suburban Design Guide (SDG) was introduced in 2019 through to 2022. See for example this Centre for Cities analysis 

[25] As referenced in this London Councils analysis

[27] Policy PM14 states: “Where spatial strategies anticipate a change in market conditions which the strategy itself is intended to foster, a proportionate approach should be taken in assessing assumptions in the longer term given the uncertainty which is likely to surround them.” On reliance on future infrastructure, it says: “there may be limited certainty about the delivery of infrastructure towards the end of the plan period. Where this is the case, it will be sufficient to assess whether reasonable assumptions have been made based on a adequate engagement with the relevant infrastructure providers.”

[28] The mayor signalled his change in policy in a 2025 speech.  Even in 2019 the Inspectors examining the current London Plan said “the inescapable conclusion is that if London’s development needs are to be met in future then a review of the Green Belt should be undertaken to at least establish any potential for sustainable development.”

[29] Developments on Green Belt land are typically a max of three storeys to minimise landscape impacts, respond to the typical character and setting, address local objections, and provide family housing which is often the market demand in these locations. Mid-rise height introduces viability challenges – potentially requiring more stringent fire safety requirements, but without the critical mass of a high-rise building, and involving provision of more apartments when the prevailing demand might be for two or three storey houses.

[30] The 1967 Plan proposed growth centres, following a testing of two alternative options: the corridor strategy of the South East Economic Planning Council based on the ‘countermagnet’ strategy of the 1964 South East Study; 2) more emphasis on population and employment growth close to London, aligned to ideas from the Standing Conference on London and South East Regional Planning. A summary is in this article from 1971 by D. E. Keeble of University of Cambridge in Vol 3. No. 2 of Area – the Journal of the Royal Geographical Society.

[31] See the London Plan 2019 Examination Report Para 108

[32] Ibid para 111

[33] See New Towns Draft Programme 23rd March 2026. The New Towns Taskforce report expressly addressed the role of new settlements within and outside London as a means for addressing the housing crisis in London – note Lichfields assisted the Taskforce with its strategic case.

[34] For example, Stansbury, Turner & Balls, Tackling the UK’s regional economic inequality: Binding constraints and avenues for policy intervention, 2023. It states: “Investing in housing in London and the South East would contribute to easing regional divides by easing the barriers to labour mobility. Interregional mobility in the UK goes in the wrong direction: people on net move away from high-productivity London to other regions, as high housing costs in London, and to a lesser extent the South East, erode the London wage premium for most of the income distribution, making the net return to migration to London small or negative (and therefore limiting the opportunity to benefit from London’s productivity to either the highly educated, or to those who happened to own property there already). This suggests a clear role for policy in alleviating London’s housing crisis.”

[35] Mr Thicket’s 2014 report on the Further Alterations to the London Plan concluded that: “The evidence before me strongly suggests that the existing London Plan strategy will not deliver sufficient homes to meet objectively assessed need. [...] The Mayor has committed to a review of the London Plan in 2016 but I do not consider that London can afford to wait until then and recommend that a review commences as soon as the FALP is adopted in 2015. In my view, the Mayor needs to explore options beyond the existing philosophy of the London Plan. That may, in the absence of a wider regional strategy to assess the options for growth and to plan and co-ordinate that growth, include engaging local planning authorities beyond the GLA’s boundaries in discussions regarding the evolution of our capital city.”

CONTINUE READING

Amazon Now: The Planning Implications of Ultra-Fast Grocery Shopping
At the start of the year, Amazon announced the launch of its latest UK grocery proposition, Amazon Now—an ultra-fast delivery service providing groceries and everyday essentials to customers, from warehouse to door, within 30 minutes. Initially piloted in south London, the service has already expanded to Canary Wharf, Bethnal Green, Shoreditch, Hoxton and Holborn with ambition for UK coverage in due course. Most cities are able to provide a 60-minute grocery delivery from Amazon via their partnership with Gopuff, the US delivery company, but no 30 minutes yet.
Amazon’s renewed push into grocery, through delivery, follows the closure of all its Amazon Fresh convenience stores in 2024. That decision, it is understood, reflected the challenges of competing in a mature convenience retail market.

Image credit: Unsplash

While attention has focused on competition with the already established fast delivery operators such as Just Eat, Deliveroo and Uber Eats, it also raises the question of how this model of convenience retailing will drive demand for space—and the further impact this may have both on the traditional grocery market and on high streets.
Ultra-fast delivery co-dependant on proximity – to both storage and customers. To achieve a 30-minute fulfilment windows, operators require a dense network of small-scale, urban fulfilment pick hubs. Typically ranging between 5,000–10,000 sq ft, these units act as mini distribution centres. Goods are then delivered by employees, in Amazon Now’s case, by e-bike in ranges of up to 6km[1]. However, and notably, Amazon have previously trialled autonomous vehicles and, most recently, drones[2] in its wider Amazon Prime network which could provide the basis of further future delivery options for Amazon Now.
This represents a notable departure from traditional retail requirements, focusing on what Amazon knows best, logistics; but introducing a different set of locational and design considerations. Sites and premises must sit within dense residential catchments, offer efficient last-mile access, and accommodate extended (often 24hr) business hours, operating often under a Class B8 Use, rather than retail.
 

Implications for the High Street

 

The expansion of ultra-fast grocery delivery is likely to have implications for the future of high streets. However, any ‘impact’ is more complex and nuanced than simply the bifurcation of convenience retail.
 
  • Convenience grocery has traditionally acted as an anchor for local centres, generating frequent footfall. A shift toward ultra-fast convenient home-delivered retail risks reducing in-store visits, with knock-on effects for the high street. However, much of this impact potentially has already occurred, with consumers responding positively and decisively to the food retailers omnichannel strategies – that is shopping online and in-store - with suggestions that we spend more as a result[3].

  • Whilst some high streets will be further impacted, there is potential for repurposing of retail and other town centre units to accommodate micro-fulfilment uses. This may help vacancy rates but may also alter the character and function of the wider high street as a whole.

  • Conversely, the integration of last-mile logistics into town centres could reinforce their role as multi-functional hubs—combining retail, leisure, residential, and distribution. This aligns with broader planning objectives around increased densification and sustainable urban living, provided impacts are effectively managed.

  • The growth of distribution uses in close proximity to residential areas raises considerations around noise, traffic, and servicing. The planning system has not fully caught up with this hybridisation of retail and logistics. Local planning authorities will need to carefully balance economic benefits with community impacts, particularly in areas not traditionally associated with logistics uses.

 

Looking Ahead

 

Image credit: Unsplash

Amazon’s approach to rapid grocery delivery so far appears cautious, perhaps unsurprisingly given recent experience with Fresh. However, a need for density and efficiency to meet consumer demand, coupled with a highly competitive market has seen it capitalise on its existing logistics expertise while managing risk.
Five years ago, the idea of groceries arriving in under half an hour felt futuristic. Now it’s becoming the new normal (certainly in cities) and is now part of how we shop not only for comparison, but convenience goods.
There are lots of examples of these last-mile operators[4] in smaller, multi-let industrial units already and this has extended to include railway arches, retail units, and other non-traditional spaces, that may previously have struggled to attract tenants. However, with Amazon in this market, competition will increase for easily accessible space which is likely to spill over into the high street.
From a planning perspective, this growth of rapid delivery raises important questions around land use, amenity, and the intensification of logistics activity in urban areas both for main shopping areas and for residents who live there.
Ultra-fast delivery through logistics is increasingly shaping our cities and towns. When convenience is king, the line between shop and warehouse is rapidly blurring. The key question is how it can be integrated in a way that complements, rather than competes with, this fast-evolving sector.

 

Footnotes

 

[1] Amazon Now | Local E-bike Deliveries | Amazon Flex

[2] 'We had people come just to see it': Amazon delivers its first UK parcels by drone - BBC News

[3] What Is Omnichannel Retailing and How To Implement It? | Retail Bulletin

[4] https://www.thegrocer.co.uk/promotional-features/dark-store-trends-and-the-consumer-demand-for-groceries-in-minutes/665822.article

 

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Beyond matchday: the rise of the UK sports and entertainment district
With the 2026 FIFA World Cup now underway across Canada, Mexico and the United States, the economic power of sport is again on global display. The tournament is the largest FIFA World Cup to date, with 48 teams and 104 matches. FIFA and the World Trade Organisation have estimated that the tournament could help drive up to $40.9bn in global GDP, deliver $8.28bn in social benefits and support nearly 824,000 full-time equivalent jobs globally. [1] [2]
For clubs, investors, developers and operators, the wider message is clear: sporting and entertainment assets have the potential to generate huge value across places, supply chains and local economies.
In the UK, that local economic effect is increasingly visible. Barclays’ analysis of the 2024/25 Premier League and Barclays Women’s Super League seasons estimated that top-flight football matchdays generated £2.3bn of consumer spending in local economies. Spending within 1km of stadiums rose by an average of 4.1% on matchdays compared with non-matchdays, with fans turning fixtures into fuller days out across travel, food and drink, entertainment, shopping and post-match activity. [3]
That is the core logic behind the rise of the sports and entertainment district. The venue creates footfall and identity. The surrounding district captures value. The two are designed to reinforce each other.
Across the UK, major venue projects are increasingly being conceived as anchors for wider mixed-use districts. Sport, live entertainment, food and beverage, hospitality, hotels, workspace, public realm and community uses are being combined into all-day, every-day, year-round destinations. For clubs, investors, developers and operators, this creates a significant opportunity. It rewards projects where the venue strategy, real estate proposition, economic benefits case and planning approach are integrated from the outset.
The scale of the opportunity is significant. DCMS estimates that in 2024 the sport sector contributed around £20.6bn in GVA to the UK economy, with the cultural sector contributing around £40.3bn and tourism directly contributing around £64.3bn. UK Music’s latest This Is Music report records that the UK music industry contributed £8bn in GVA in 2024 and supported 220,000 full-time equivalent jobs. [4] [5]
Sports and entertainment districts sit at the intersection of these sectors. At their best, they can create new revenue streams, attract private investment, support local jobs, generate visitor spending, strengthen supply chains, create community value and support places that work throughout the week and across the year.
 

From venue to destination

 

The traditional stadium model was heavily event-led, with revenue concentrated around matchdays or a limited calendar of major events. The newer model is more diverse. It asks a different question: how can the asset work every day, not just when the turnstiles are open?
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is one of the clearest UK examples. The club’s socio-economic impact study reported that Tottenham Hotspur’s activity generated £344m in GVA and supported more than 3,700 jobs across Haringey, Enfield and Waltham Forest in 2021/22. Across Greater London, the reported impact was £478m in GVA and 5,100 jobs. [6]
The Tottenham example matters because the venue was designed to support a wider events strategy, including NFL, concerts, rugby, boxing and other major events. That creates a different operating proposition from a football only stadium. A broader events calendar supports more regular footfall, a wider visitor economy impact and a stronger basis for surrounding leisure, food and beverage, hospitality and commercial uses.
Wembley Park shows the same principle at a larger urban scale. Quintain’s case study material records around 500,000 sq. ft of retail and leisure and around 10,000 residents at Wembley Park, with the area now operating as a long-term, mixed-use neighbourhood around the stadium and arena. [7]
This shows that a major venue can become the anchor for a broader place strategy where event day activity, everyday uses, public realm and local connectivity reinforce one another.
At Craven Cottage, Fulham Pier - a project Lichfields has advised Fulham FC on for many years - provides a more compact but highly relevant example. On matchdays it is a football stand with extensive fan and hospitality facilities; on non-matchdays it is a riverside destination, with food and beverage, events, hospitality and use of the public realm designed to broaden the role of the stadium beyond matchday.

Image credit: Populous

The direction of travel is clear: stadium-led place creation is becoming an increasingly important part of the UK venue market.
 

Arenas are part of the same story

 

Arenas are increasingly central to the same discussion about entertainment-led investment, visitor economy growth and city competitiveness. Utilising the same infrastructure, stadia and arenas are obvious bedfellows.
Co-op Live in Manchester is the most topical example, situated next to the Etihad Stadium. An economic impact report prepared by Lichfields, covering the period from construction through to the arena’s first year of operation in May 2025, reported more than £1.3bn in total turnover and around £785m in GVA to the UK economy. In its first year of operation, Co-op Live reported around £852m in turnover, £455m in GVA, 105 events and 1.5m fans. [8]

Image credit: iStock

The Manchester impact extends beyond the arena itself. Co-op Live reports that £313.4m of the total GVA generated since building began was contributed to the Manchester economy, including visitor spending across hotels, restaurants, pubs and bars. The venue also demonstrates how major entertainment infrastructure can act as an economic and civic anchor, supporting jobs, visitor activity and wider engagement with the city. [8]
For operators and investors, this matters because the most compelling projects are increasingly judged on how well the venue supports a broader destination, how it extends dwell time, how it diversifies revenue and how it contributes to the surrounding economy.
 

The US influence – adapting the model for the UK

 

The 2026 World Cup also provides a natural moment to look at the North American market. Many of the tournament’s matches are being staged in a region where the sports and entertainment district has matured into a distinct real estate and operating proposition.
The Battery Atlanta has become one of the most closely watched examples. Located next to Truist Park, home of Major League Baseball’s Atlanta Braves, it demonstrates how a major sports venue can be paired with a wider mix of commercial, leisure, hospitality and residential uses. Atlanta Braves Holdings reported that, in 2025, its mixed-use development revenue grew by 45% to $97m, alongside baseball revenue of $635m. [9]

Image credit: Erin Doering

More broadly, a 2025 Klutch Sports study for Royal Bank of Canada, focused on the North American market, estimated that sports-anchored, mixed-use districts could attract more than $100bn of investment over the next 15 years, underlining the scale of investor interest in the model. [10]
That influence is now visible in the UK market. Co-op Live was developed by Oak View Group in partnership with City Football Group and Harry Styles, bringing a major US-based venue developer and operator into one of the UK’s leading music and entertainment cities.
In Birmingham, the proposed Sports Quarter represents a more direct example of US-backed sports-led regeneration, with proposals including a 62,000-capacity new stadium, sports campus, training facilities, academy, community pitches, and leisure, commercial and residential development. [11]
The UK is adapting the strategic logic of sports and entertainment districts to its own delivery environment. Land ownership, planning policy, community expectations, local government finance and public transport provision all shape how these projects come forward in the UK. The opportunity is to adapt the commercial logic of the venue-anchored district to those conditions, creating projects that are investable, deliverable, rooted in their local context and planned as integrated place propositions from the outset.
 

What this means for UK delivery

 

Venues need to work harder across the week and across the year. Food and beverage, hospitality, conferences, hotels, fan experiences, leisure uses, membership products and cultural programming can extend activity beyond core event days and create more resilient income streams.
The UK delivery environment makes the integration of planning, economics and operations particularly important.
First, the project needs a credible year-round operating model. The strongest cases explain how the venue and surrounding uses will operate in ordinary weeks, shoulder periods and non-event windows, as well as during major events.
Second, the local economic case needs to be specific. Barclays’ matchday spending analysis shows the scale of expenditure that can occur around stadiums when fans turn fixtures into full-day experiences. For venue-led districts, the question is how that spend can be supported and captured through the right mix of food and beverage, hospitality, public realm, movement routes, local business links and post-event activity. [3]
Third, the community benefits case needs to be specific. Construction jobs, operational roles, hospitality and events staffing, apprenticeships, local procurement, community access and grassroots sport can all form part of the wider value created by sports and entertainment districts. The most persuasive cases explain what benefits are created, where they arise, and how local people, businesses and community organisations can access them.
Fourth, public realm and connectivity need to be central to the proposition. The modern visitor experience starts before arrival and continues after the final whistle or encore. Transport, wayfinding, walking and cycling routes, public spaces, safety, servicing and crowd management all shape whether a venue becomes part of a successful district.
Finally, the benefits case should be developed early. A well constructed economic impact assessment does more than support a planning application. It provides the evidence base for engaging local authorities as partners, attracting anchor occupiers, supporting naming rights and sponsorship discussions, and demonstrating long-term operating credibility to funders and communities.
This is where planning, economics and commercial strategy need to work together. Developed early, the benefits case can help shape the project, strengthen the planning strategy and support the wider investment proposition.
 

A UK opportunity

 

The UK is well placed to benefit from this next generation of venue-led investment. It has globally recognised sports brands, a deep live music market, major visitor destinations, strong city identities and a growing appetite for experience-led development.
The opportunity also extends beyond the largest clubs and biggest cities. There is a spectrum of viable models: major urban entertainment districts, arena-led regeneration projects, stadium-adjacent leisure quarters, waterfront destinations, training ground campuses and mixed-use developments anchored around sport and culture.
The commercial logic of the sports and entertainment district is now well established. The economic case is increasingly evidenced. The investor interest is real. The strongest projects translate ambition into a deliverable, fundable and consentable proposition.
For investors and developers entering or expanding in the UK market, this means engaging planning, economics and operations early. Land ownership structures, community expectations, Green Belt policy, heritage constraints, transport impact requirements and Environmental Impact Assessment requirements can all influence the shape, programme and viability of a project.
The next generation of UK sports and entertainment districts will be defined by the discipline with which vision, investment, planning, economics and operations are brought together. For clubs, investors and operators, the opportunity is substantial: to create destinations that generate activity beyond event days, support local economies, strengthen long term revenues and deliver places that work for communities as well as visitors.
The strongest projects will be those that treat the venue, the district and the benefits case as one integrated proposition from the outset.

 

Footnotes

 

[1] FIFA World Cup 2026™

[2] FIFA-WTO study estimates USD 47 billion economic output from FIFA Club World Cup™ and FIFA World Cup™ in the US

[3] Premier League and Barclays Women’s Super League matches generate an estimated £2.3bn of consumer spending each season - A1 Retail Magazine

[4] DCMS Sectors Economic Estimates Gross Value Added 2024 (provisional) - GOV.UK

[5] This Is Music 2025 - UK Music

[6] Club releases analysis of its socio-economic contribution to the local area

[7] Case Study - Solar – Quintain Ltd

[8] Co-op Live Contributes Over £1.3 Billion Turnover to UK Economy Since Inception | Co-op Live

[9] Atlanta Braves Holdings Reports Fourth Quarter and Year End 2025 Financial Results :: Atlanta Braves Holdings, Inc. (BATRA)

[10] Royal Bank of Canada hires Klutch Sports for mixed-use district study

[11] Birmingham Sports Quarter - what you need to know - BBC News

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