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28 November 2007
The Thames Gateway design pact calls for an immediate step change in design quality in the Gateway and outlines the actions needed to achieve this.
Last year CABE looked at the unique identity, culture and character of the Thames Gateway. New things happen set out a vision for the future of the Gateway and defined the key ideas which should be at the heart of planning policies, investment strategies, design decisions and environmental projects.
But if the Thames Gateway is to avoid becoming an urban wasteland of badly-designed housing estates and public spaces, those new things need to happen now, not at some distant point in the future.
CABE and the Thames Gateway Strategic Partnership are launching the Thames Gateway design pact which calls for an immediate step change in design quality in the Gateway and provides absolute clarity about what actions are needed to achieve this over the next three years.
Richard Simmons, CABE's chief executive, stressed that a tangible commitment to design must form the basis of delivery in the Thames Gateway. 'The new and existing communities have the right to expect it. Good design must be at the heart of the Gateway's transformation.'
The Thames Gateway design pact is aimed at all the organisations involved in the transformation of the Thames Gateway, from those carrying out large-scale masterplanning through to the delivery of neighbourhoods and homes on the ground. Signatories will include Communities and Local Government (CLG), public sector landowners, regional development agencies, local delivery vehicles, local authorities, registered social landlords and private developers.
CABE believes the following key things need to happen:
CABE and the Thames Gateway Strategic Partnership will now work with all the key Gateway parties on agreeing to a series of actions.