
Originally Posted by
Partsky
Quite agree with your last paragraph WW. Our urban and greenbelt environments have their own secrets. When I worked in housing I saw so much "land banking" of sites, green and brownfield and a lot of this stuff is still not built on, years later, despite demand.. Where I live in Lydiate, the majority of the surrounding land, whilst still relatively untouched after the Scotch Piper Pub on the Southport Road, is actually owned by builders or similar who have bought the land and the resident or tenant farmer is allowed to rent the land back whilst the true owners await the a change in planning or green belt legislation.
They are awaiting the extension of the local plan. They buy on the edge of towns and cities knowing eventually the planning limits will expand. Planning and land allocation is rigged, according the Kevin Cahill in Who Owns Britain.
In most of Europe homes are selfbuilt. That is, they get the land, design the house and have it built by a builder (or yourself if you are up to it). That is why you do not see the vast developer estates, filled with pokey little houses feet apart, like in the UK.

You do not see this in Germany, which has the same population density as the UK
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Approximately 80% of all homes built in the UK are built by about only 20 companies. In no other country in the western world does such a monopoly exist. The sort of situation seen in banana republics. The House Builders Federation influences the building regulations so heavily in order to maintain the status quo that the UK is backwards in house building technology compared to large parts of Western Europe, Scandinavia and North America.
See:
How land affects us all
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