This timely report examines four inner neighbourhoods in two Northern cities that suffer from low demand, incipient abandonment and severe depopulation.
It attempts to uncover the causes of abandonment, describe the struggle of those living through the experience and assess attempted remedies. The problems are examined at three levels - acute problems at city level; extreme problems at neighbourhood level; and complete abandonment in the worst pockets of the most difficult areas.
The researchers found that regardless of housing quality - abandonment is affecting all tenures and all property types.
The critical driving factors are:
But the study also uncovered hundreds of projects that are helping to hold conditions. The report suggests a range of policy options that can build on the positive measures already in train and concludes that there is real potential for repopulating inner areas.
In some inner city areas there is virtually no demand for housing. Anne Power and Katharine Mumford of the LSE, in a detailed study of such neighbourhoods, found that the reasons were more to do with severe poverty and joblessness within the neighbourhoods than the quality of the housing. Intensive inputs on many fronts are helping to hold the conditions. Their study found:
This study aims to: uncover and explain those events that are combining to cause the abandonment of urban neighbourhoods; describe the struggle of those living through the experience; uncover and assess attempted remedies and their impact on conditions and trends.
The problems are at three levels:
The main focus is on Newcastle and Manchester, two cities experiencing long-run decline. Like other large cities, they are adversely hit both by the loss of key industries and by more general counter-urban trends. The North is suffering most from the problems of abandonment and low demand. Across the country there is also changing demand for social housing, leading to higher turnover and more difficult-to-let property. The result is intense problems in cities and poor neighbourhoods.
Between 1971 and 1996, Manchester lost 22 per cent and Newcastle 16 per cent of its population:
The exodus slowed in the 1990s and may reverse. But the rapid losses continued in the extreme areas.
The cities experience concentrated multiple deprivation, which is far more intense in the inner neighbourhoods. Concentrated poverty is, according to reports from both cities, the single biggest explanatory factor in neighbourhood decline. All the neighbourhoods are part of much larger areas of severe deprivation. Lack of work is a major factor. Double the proportion of the working age population is not working, studying or training compared with the national average (Table 1).
Since the mid-1980s waiting-lists for council housing have fallen dramatically in both cities and continue to fall. There is virtually no waiting time for housing in the poorest neighbourhoods. Both cities have now opened their allocations and are advertising nationally.
Four neighbourhoods were studied in detail. One in each city shows acute symptoms of abandonment:
In the other two neighbourhoods, conditions have not plummeted to such a low point and there is more ground for hope that the situation can be stabilised or reversed.
The neighbourhoods share many characteristics with unpopular and difficult-to-manage urban areas all over the country, including high demand cities like London. There is an intense hierarchy of popular and unpopular areas. The least popular suffer high levels of empty property, high turnover, some abandonment and demolition due to low demand. But there is a broad distinction between low demand in economically prosperous cities and regions such as the South East and low demand in cities and regions suffering long-term structural decline such as the North.
In most cities, including Manchester and Newcastle, there is nearly double the national proportion of council and housing association stock and much lower levels of owner-occupation. This skewed ownership pattern is far more extreme in the deprived neighbourhoods. Right-to-Buy sales are extremely low. This underlines the poverty of the people and the low value attached to the areas.
The turnover of population is extremely high in council housing, particularly in the neighbourhoods studied. But turnover affects all tenures. If turnover moves above a certain level, it can become unmanageable. The turnover rate in council housing was between 20 and 50 per cent. Figure 1 shows the vicious circle that this creates.
Housing associations have some very attractive, small-scale, high quality developments tucked into the four areas which are experiencing low demand; they are 'poaching' tenants from older but often renovated council housing or simply finding properties unlettable. Some residents actively campaigned against housing association development whilst, in other parts, residents supported or even initiated development. But housing associations are now demolishing unlettable, unsellable property.
Incipient abandonment: the worst pockets
Both cities reported a swift, sudden and unexpected loss of demand in the last few years. One in six properties are empty in the neighbourhoods, many more in some pockets.
Both cities are regularly demolishing abandoned property. Demolition of specific unpopular blocks and blighted property has sometimes increased the popularity of surrounding houses. But in some instances, demolition has fuelled the problem by signalling a general lack of confidence. An atmosphere of uncertainty about the future of the area gives signals of zero value and zero demand, thereby deterring would-be applicants. Many demolition decisions are being made in response to immediate neighbourhood conditions without a clear overall plan or strategy or a full appraisal of the options. Other nearby streets then often start to show the same symptoms. Currently some demolition proposals are provoking objections even where levels of abandonment are high. Remaining residents often want to hold on.
The speed with which streets or blocks are shifting from being relatively well-occupied to nearly half empty is alarming. This creates instability and a reduction in informal social controls, leaving a vacuum which eventually tips a highly localised low demand area into rapid abandonment.
In sum, there has been a collapse in housing demand within the neighbourhoods:
Crime, particularly violent crime, is a serious problem. But proactive policing has made significant in-roads through co-ordinated action with residents.
Most schools in these neighbourhoods have falling rolls, surplus places and high pupil turnover. Free school meals - a clear measure of family poverty - are sometimes four times the national rate. In spite of this, schools occasionally excel - achieving standards just above the national average.
Low demand has many negative impacts on those living and working in the areas, but a fightback often develops including the following features:
Inner neighbourhoods offer many positive assets which encourage more stable residents to stay and may lead to a renaissance:
Cities are under great pressure but there is real potential for repopulating inner areas:
In the end, urban neighbourhoods need an over-arching structure for managing conditions and orchestrating the constant changes:
The researchers conclude that it is not inevitable that inner city areas will continue to lose people, lose control, and lose viability. It is possible to make cities work. The future of our environment, our communities and our crowded country depends on saving what is a huge, wasting asset. The neighbourhoods where the study found such acute decline may become the urban centres of tomorrow.
The four inner city neighbourhoods studied in detail contained approximately 16,000 households in total. The study involved interviews with 104 staff working in the main local services, and 24 residents representatives in the two cities. A further 33 people from local authorities and housing associations across the country were interviewed. In addition, the study included direct observation, an analysis of press reports, local newsletters, photographs, street counts of empty property, and collection of available facts on the areas and the cities from a wide range of sources including the census, council reports and monitoring, government records, other research and national information.