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by Lucy Markham
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28 July, 2020 · 5 min read
In the fifth in our series of articles about the 4th Industrial Revolution and its potential impact on the planning and development lifecycle we consider the potential for the planning process.
Planning is complex for a good reason. With the need, as a statutory process, to mediate public and private interest through detailed policies which can originate nationally and evolve locally, timing can be an issue for those wishing to bring forward development quickly to meet market demand.
While the process itself needs time, it should still be as efficient as possible and this is where this new technology can help.
In many respects, basic technology improvements can make an enormous difference. Statutory documents, such as Local Plans, don’t need to be long linear documents. They can be fully-searchable and linked together, as well as incorporating more accessible features that evolve as new technology develops in the same way that websites such as Rightmove or On the Market are keeping pace.
New technology will initially assist in four key areas in particular:
Connected Places Catapult, a UK Government-sponsored organisation, via Innovate UK, has also been considering technological solutions to the problems in the planning process. Two important areas for improvement, for which they are developing technologies, are:
Underpinning these technologies will be the need for the data platforms mentioned elsewhere – Land Registry information and Building Information Data, to name two.
With great stress on resources in many Local Authorities, planners themselves will finally be freed up to focus on wider issues where new technologies are no substitute for human involvement. More time should become available for spatial planning and consultation as well as specialist areas such as heritage, where planning is often a highly subjective trade-off between protection of heritage characteristics and viability that needs bespoke, experienced advice.
While planning itself will always have to balance a range of interests, delays due to compliance and data at least should become a thing of the past. These technologies have the potential to eliminate systemic delays and bring about faster, more consistent applications backed up by better, more inclusive scheme consultation.
8 August, 2024
by Guy Bransby
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8 August, 2024
by Ashley Collins, Rachel Mushet
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25 July, 2024
by Tim Miles
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