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PROPERTY LED REGENERATION
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Property Led Regeneration Property-led regeneration involves the regeneration of an inner-city area by changing the image of the area, improving the environment, attracting private investment and improving confidence for further investment. In many cases, it involves ‘flagship’ projects such as at Canary Wharf in the London Docklands. UDCs are the main form of property-led regeneration.
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CARDIFF BAY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
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Where is Cardiff Bay ?
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Context Cardiff : a late 19 th century boom-town
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Context Originally a port city And around the port grew a dockland community : multi-ethnic, internationally connected, but semi-detached socially and economically within the city
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Context from the early 1900s Cardiff had a more diversified economic base even so, by 1913 the city was among the world’s leading coal exporting ports. in 1886 a coal exchange had been established in the Docks area
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Context from the 1920s, the port declined the city grew…away from the port
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Cardiff’s docklands in the 1980s A poor and stigmatised multi-racial community Here is the 2000 position
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Cardiff’s docklands in the 1980s a great deal of under-used land poorly linked by road or rail a disproportionate amount of local employment in manufacturing (in a service sector city) commercial and industrial property in poor repair, and largely unwanted
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Cardiff’s docklands in the 1980s A poor and stigmatised multi-racial community Here is the 2000 position
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Cardiff’s land use in the late 1980s
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The regeneration late 1970s/early 1980s : local authorities tried to give grants to local firms and improve the environment. 1987 Cardiff Bay Development Corporation set up by national government
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Cardiff Bay Development Corporation run by a board of government appointees fixed term (originally envisaged 10 years, eventually was 13 years – i.e until 2000); its approach has continued, though had big budget : eventually spent £440million largely on a barrage (£200m+), land acquisition (£91m), highways (£81m) and land reclamation (£26m) community and training had £14m, marketing had £22m
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The regeneration late 1970s/early 1980s : local authorities tried to give grants to local firms and improve the environment. a drop in the ocean 1987 Cardiff Bay Development Corporation set up by national government
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Cardiff Bay Development Corporation run by a board of government appointees fixed term (originally envisaged 10 years, eventually was 13 years – i.e until 2000); its approach has continued, though had big budget : eventually spent £440million largely on a barrage (£200m+), land acquisition (£91m), highways (£81m) and land reclamation (£26m) community and training had £14m, marketing had £22m
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CBDC’s objectives The objectives of regeneration were : to reunite the city and its waterfront to promote a superb environment in which people will want to live, work and play achieve highest standards of design in all developments create wide range of opportunities stimulate residential development for a cross-section establish the area as a recognised centre of excellence in regeneration
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The objectives quantified Private sector investment : £1.4 billion Leverage (public:private) 1:3.8 2 million visitors by 2000 29,000 jobs Industrial and commercial development: 1.15 million sq m 5,900 units of housing
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What this meant : a new kind of docklands it is (and always was) clear that this amounts to a new vision of Cardiff Bay one that is socially and physically different However… nothing on sustainability nothing on social justice
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The method A distinctive approach has been taken to regenerating Cardiff Bay : top-down (appointed board) property-led market-responsive/market-dependent
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Drawbacks of this approach can ignore the aspirations of local people : Cardiff Bay’s regeneration hasn’t primarily been about improving the welfare of local people it’s vulnerable to volatility of property markets : in the late 1980s and early 1990s little was built in Cardiff Bay because of a slump in property
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The method in essence, the strategy has been to make property development in Cardiff Bay attractive (ie profitable) to developers they develop, which attracts economic and social activity – thus regenerating the area the benefits then ‘trickle down’ to poorer members of the community eg a hotel development creates profits for developers and operators, but also jobs for porters and cleaners.
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Outcomes - physical a transformation 327 hectares of land reclaimed 1.1million square metres of non-residential development close to 5000 new flats and houses 42 km of roads built or up-graded a 1.2 km barrage built
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Outcomes - physical It looks new
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Outcomes - economic Cardiff Bay is visibly busier than it was twenty years ago yet, no net increase in employment (still around 15,000/16,000) but a huge change in employment sectors Cardiff Bay is now an area of service based employment, as Cardiff has long been not much ‘poaching’ of firms from elsewhere in Cardiff (one study found 20% of property take up in this category) but not much excitation of property markets outside Cardiff either
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Outputs - economic Manufacturing sector employment in Cardiff Bay
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Outcomes - economic little evidence of much ‘trickle down’ the most deprived sub-ward (Super Output Area) in Wales on 2005 data is Butetown more than half the residents of Butetown (ward) are in receipt of means-tested benefits Unemployment still disproportionately high among Cardiff’s ethnic minorities
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Outcomes - social over 1000 new units of social housing have been built in Cardiff Bay but there are evident social divides: consider this blurb from the brochure of a new apartment development: ‘If you do wish to retreat from the metropolis, Bayside has its own luxurious spa with superb leisure facilties, including Wales’ first lap-lane swimming pool (17m x 3m), a spa pool, gymnasium, steam room and sauna. Privacy is guaranteed.’
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The social rift in Butetown Compare so-called Lower tier super output area data from 2001 Census for the three parts of Butetown (%) Area 1 Area 2 Area 3 Muslim37164 White457186 No quals 534611
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Outcomes - cultural the regeneration has always been about creating a new sense of place, and a new image three-pronged strategy :
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new kinds of public spaces
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new kinds of activities and people two million visitors to the core area of the Bay a programme of events, especially in the summer and one internationally-significant new attraction – the Millennium Centre – which also houses national (Welsh) and local activities
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new image ‘Cardiff Bay’ is itself a new name, yet now very well established the redevelopments have overwhelmed local history in a wave of faux-maritime place-names: Brigantine Place, Ocean Park, Atlantic Wharf, etc.. CBDC spent more on marketing than on training
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Some final thoughts (1) Undoubtedly, a great deal has happened. A great deal of land has been developed; landowners, developers, and construction companies have done well Many new kinds of jobs have been created Might these have not been created in Cardiff if this development had not occurred? A lot of new public areas have been created. Overall, a space of production has become a space of consumption How will the new developments link to the city centre?
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Some final thoughts (2) Might there have been a greater concern for transport connections to the Bay ? And less reliance on private transport Might there have been better targeted programmes to improve the welfare of Butetown’s residents? And more opportunity for them, and Cardiff’s residents, to have an input into the regeneration?
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Student Tasks Use the video, Cardiff Bay Factsheet, Geo Factsheet 91, your notes and internet research to answer the following questions How was the CBDC funded? Outline the redevelopment of Cardiff Bay between 1987 and 2000. Describe the economic, social and environmental benefits of the Cardiff Bay redevelopment scheme. Was there universal approval of the work of the CBDC?
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