New plan for jobs, economic growth and new homes approved

Date published: 28 October 2016


Greater Manchester Leaders agreed to approve the draft Greater Manchester Spatial Framework (GMSF) plan for consultation at the meeting of the Joint GMCA/AGMA Executive Board on 28 October 2016.

The GMSF is the ten local authorities’ joint plan for land allocation across Greater Manchester to provide housing and investment opportunities for sustainable growth.

The draft GM Spatial Framework will be published on 31 October and the views of Greater Manchester residents and stakeholders will be sought during an eight-week consultation ending on 23 December 2016. Views submitted will be considered and a final draft will be published in 2017 when a further period of consultation will be held.

The public are invited to a series of events arranged over the coming weeks. Further information on these will be published online at www.greatermanchester-ca.gov.uk/GMSF

Responses to the consultation are also being invited and can be made online, by email or in writing – details below.

Over the next twenty years there is a need to deliver continued sustainable economic growth, creating more jobs and new homes for the people of Greater Manchester.
Greater Manchester’s local authorities are working together to deliver this growth to ensure new homes and jobs are provided in the right places with the transport infrastructure (roads, rail, Metrolink) to support communities and manage growth sustainably. By having a plan, greater control over land allocation will ensure development of new homes comes with investment in roads, school places, green spaces and public transport. Without a plan, development would happen in any case, without capturing benefits for local communities. In other words, a place with a plan is a place with a future.

The GMSF will help our city-region to manage growth so that Greater Manchester is a better place to live, work and visit. Greater Manchester should be as well known for the quality of its environment as for its economic success. Greenbelt will play a role in achieving this goal but there are important green spaces, parks, rivers and canals in the heart of our urban communities, which are equally valuable. The protection and enhancement of all these spaces is a central theme of the framework and strategy.

As with all statutory development plans, consideration has been given to national population and economic forecasts to ensure there is provision of enough land for the number of new homes and workplaces needed to accommodate Greater Manchester’s growing population. Consultation and further evidence has been gathered and tested to assess the precise levels of growth required and how best to achieve this for Greater Manchester.

The draft plan outlines a requirement for gross new office floorspace of 2,450,000m2 and 4,000,000m2 of industrial and warehousing alongside the need for an additional 227,200 new homes across Greater Manchester by 2035.

A key consideration of the development of the framework has been to adopt a brownfield first approach to land allocation. This focus has ensured that nearly three quarters of the proposed land supply is within the existing urban area on brownfield land with remaining new allocations from land being withdrawn from the greenbelt. A new greenbelt boundary for Greater Manchester will offer greater protection to prevent development in the newly designated greenbelt whilst also meeting our housing and employment needs over the next 20 years.

Greater Manchester’s greenbelt was designated thirty years ago to check unplanned development and whilst it is still relevant for that purpose the time has come to revise the boundary to ensure space for growth over the next 20 years.

The GMSF will minimise the amount of greenbelt land required for development by focusing on relatively few, large sites. This will provide opportunities to support developments with the required transport infrastructure, necessary school places and other vital services needed to create successful neighbourhoods.

Councillor Richard Farnell, lead member for planning and housing at GMCA, said: “Greater Manchester is a thriving city region with great opportunities for its residents and businesses.

“In order to continue to attract business, workers and tourists, we need to grow. We will successfully manage this growth and deliver major economic, social and environmental improvements.

“We want all residents of Greater Manchester to share in the benefits of this prosperity and we are considering them first and foremost in this process. This eight-week consultation is a time for people to understand the plan and reflect on how we as a city region grow sustainably to continue to prosper.”

Central to the draft spatial framework is a very strong emphasis on delivering major economic, social and environmental improvements across the city region. It outlines that the land already identified in the urban area is developed, but that some new development will be required on existing greenbelt land.

Delivering the scale of growth set out in GMSF will also require a programme to encourage regeneration and development on brownfield land also transport investment, supported by a new transport fund. This will build on the existing Greater Manchester Transport Fund, and transport commitments within the 2014 Greater Manchester Devolution Agreement.

Responses via:

http://gmsf-consult.objective.co.uk

GMSF@agma.gov.uk

Greater Manchester Integrated Support Team
PO Box 532
Town Hall
Manchester
M60 2LA

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