IHBC greets CABE poll: people know ‘better places = better lives’

IHBC director Seán O’Reilly welcomed CABE’s news that people know that better places make for better lives. He said: “These findings confirm again that quality places really do make people’s lives better, and we all know well managed historic areas consistently get top ratings. People realise that conservation makes people’s lives better because conservation is about caring for the best and improving the rest.”

“The new draft statement on planning for the historic environment, out now for consultation from CLG, makes the polling results especially timely. Government must make absolutely clear that managing our heritage is not just about how we document our cultural inheritance or when we can destroy it. CLG has to make sure that planning authorities deliver sustainable development by having them address the full value of the historic environment: including its economic role in a £5 billion a year construction industry; as an environmental resource in a society threatened by climate change, and for the social benefits it brings in better and healthier lives. Of course you need the right skills to get the best from traditional areas or historic fabric, conservation skills. If that expertise doesn’t inform planning decisions, clearly we all lose out.”

“CABE is also absolutely right to highlight the threat to non-statutory council services in the current economic climate. Without wider legislative reform to care for historic places, it is all the more important that CLG’s new policy statement gets it right. It’s worth remembering that current government guidance on planning and the historic environment states that the avoidable loss of historic fabric is a waste of economic as well as environmental resources. That position dates from the last century, when we knew much less about how culture, environment and economy interacted. The IHBC is keen to make sure that any new statement on managing historic places will be as visionary for the 21st century.”

CABE reports on its research as follows:

Nearly nine out of ten people say that better quality buildings and public spaces improve their quality of life, according to new MORI research published by CABE on its tenth anniversary. CABE is marking its first decade with an exploration of fresh ideas for the next ten years. As a society, we face three crises – an age of austerity, a short time to stabilise greenhouse gas emissions, and social pessimism. The strongest response to all these can come through changes to our built environment.

The current risk is that public spending cuts to non-statutory council services, like parks management and maintenance, lead to places becoming dirtier and shabbier, with key targets like community safety and obesity being missed as a result.

The new research shows that the quality of the built environment is seen as important by voters across the political spectrum. Only two per cent of people who intend to vote Conservative don’t have any interest in what buildings, streets, parks and public spaces look or feel like to use. This compares with four per cent of people who said they would vote Labour and three per cent who said they would vote for other parties.

Richard Simmons, CABE chief executive, welcomed the research findings. He said: ‘It’s vital that people making critical decisions about public spending appreciate exactly what the public wants and values. The quality of buildings and places affects everyone, every day.’

More than eight out of ten people say they are interested in the look and feel of buildings and public spaces. Only three per cent of the population doesn’t believe the quality of buildings and public space has an impact on their health and wellbeing.

There are key regional differences. More than a quarter of East Midlands residents are not interested in how buildings or public spaces look or feel. By comparison, nearly nine out of ten people in the North West region said they were interested.

Men and women agree equally that better quality buildings and public space improves their quality of life. And ethnic background seems to make little difference to people’s interest in buildings and places. But older people tend to be more interested in how the built environment looks and feels to use than younger people; while those approaching retirement age are more than a fifth more engaged than people aged 16-24.

http://www.cabe.org.uk/news/better-buildings-and-spaces-improve-quality-of-life

For the consultation on PPS 15, Planning for the Historic Environment, see
http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/planningandbuilding/
consultationhistoricpps

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