Threads / Design and Placemaking Planning Guidance / An absence of hazards is not enough on its own to ensure th…
Committee Material Published 19 Jan 2024 ↗ View on Parliament

An absence of hazards is not enough on its own to ensure that housing protects residents’ health. Space, design and location matter, and these should not be the preserve of those who are able to afford more expensive housing. Several standards exist to support the development of housing that is more widely protective of good health. Dwellings created under Permitted Development Rights (PDR), which comprise some of the most egregious examples of housing that is bad for health that we have seen...

An absence of hazards is not enough on its own to ensure that housing protects residents’ health. Space, design and location matter, and these should not be the preserve of those who are able to afford more expensive housing. Several standards exist to support the development of housing that is more widely protective of good health. Dwellings created under Permitted Development Rights (PDR), which comprise some of the most egregious examples of housing that is bad for health that we have seen during this inquiry, are now subject to minimum safeguards on space and light. These are welcome and much-needed but they are also an exception: adheren Type: recommendation | Number: 6 | Paragraph: 26 | Response status: not_accepted Government response: We fully recognise and support the important roles played by local directors of public health and their teams, including in furthering core aims of integrated care systems to improve population health and tackle inequalities. However, we have no