香港六合彩中特网

XClose

The Bartlett Development Planning Unit

Home
Menu

DPU Working Paper - No. 193

The making, unmaking, and remaking of Thamesmead. A story of urban design, decline, and renewal in postwar London

The making, unmaking, and remaking of Thamesmead

20 November 2017

By Ariana Markowitz

This working paper tells the story of the making, unmaking, and remaking of Thamesmead in southeast London, a major housing project intended to address the postwar housing crisis and the site of an equally major regeneration project today.

Situating Thamesmead in the context of the dominant planning regimes in Britain in the first half of the twentieth century鈥攖he Garden City, the Radiant City, and the New Town鈥攖his paper frames the area鈥檚 decline in terms of rising crime rates.

Drawing from Schubert (2016), the literature on crime and design is divided into three theoretical silos: rational actor, collective efficacy, and actor-network. There is a disproportionate focus here on the first one, embodied by Newman鈥檚 doctrine of Defensible Space which is arguably the most influential concept in environmental crime prevention to date.

The case study describes planners鈥 efforts to build an ambitious New Town within London that prioritized innovative design, connectivity, the integration of nature and green space, and the segregation of motorists and pedestrians.

In evaluating these features, the paper concludes that South Thamesmead鈥檚 decline was less the result of misguided efforts to 鈥渄esign out crime鈥 than of the same types of miscalculations that felled housing estates throughout Britain. Current regeneration efforts in South Thamesmead offer opportunities to correct the mistakes of the past.

The paper can be downloaded here: