Homes for the high street: Government tears up planning red tape to allow shops to be converted into dwellings and owners to add TWO extra storeys to existing buildings in laws introduced today
The government is tearing up planning red tape from today to allow boarded up shops and abandoned offices to be turned into homes without the need for full planning permission, under new laws being introduced today.
Changes to the planning system will make it easier for business owners and developers to 'repurpose' premises that are no longer needed and bring them back into use.
In a further move to support town centres, families will be offered a new fast-track system allowing them to add up to two storeys to their homes.
Campaign groups have hit out at reforms, that include plans to have dedicated areas for building, with one group saying government plans could lead to 'thousands of tiny, poor quality "homes" in unacceptable locations like industrial estates.'
Shop owners could soon benefit from government plans to convert businesses into homes with less red tape
The rule shake-up will mean full planning applications will not be required to demolish and rebuild unused buildings as homes
The initiatives, which are set to be put before Parliament later today, are part of a wider drive to free up the planning system and allow more development.
Environment Secretary George Eustice yesterday announced a review of the system of environmental impact assessments, which is blamed for holding up some developments.
It comes less than a month after PM Boris Johnson used a speech in Dudley, West Yorkshire, to promise the 'the most radical reforms of our planning system since the end of the Second World War'.
And ministers are drawing up proposals for broader changes this summer, including a possible new presumption in favour of development in certain designated areas.
Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick said the government is 'cutting out unnecessary bureaucracy,' in the planning process
England's town centres, including Eton High Street, have faced a slow return to trade since lockdown restrictions were eased
The rule shake-up will mean full planning applications will not be required to demolish and rebuild unused buildings as homes, allowing commercial and retail properties to be quickly repurposed, according to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government.
The latest changes, which will come into force in September, are designed to help breathe new life into high streets hit hard by the lockdown, as well as opening up a new route for housing provision.
At present, firms need full 'change of use' planning permission to convert a shop or office into a new type of business or into housing.
Speaking in Dudley last month, the Prime Minister pledged to bring forward 'the most radical reforms of our planning system since the end of the Second World War'
From September, they will be offered a fast-track process for approval. Developers will also be allowed to demolish vacant buildings for new purposes without full planning permission.
According to The Telegraph, today's report will outline plans to scrap leaseholds, giving 4.3million people the chance to take control of their homes from their landlords.
Where leaseholds offer tenants temporary ownership of a property, government changes could see people owning their flat's outright and sharing building management costs with their neighbours.
Prof Nick Hopkins, the Law Comissioner and an author of the report being published today, told The Telegraph: 'Commonhold involves a culture change. It would be a move away from an "us and them" mindset, towards "us and ourselves".
'Our reforms will make a real difference by giving leaseholders greater control over their homes, offering a cheaper and easier route out of leasehold, and establishing commonhold as the preferred alternative system.'
Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick said: 'We are reforming the planning system and cutting out unnecessary bureaucracy to give small business owners the freedom they need to adapt and evolve, and to renew our town centres with new enterprises and more housing.
'These changes will help transform boarded up, unused buildings safely into high quality homes at the heart of th eir communities.
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