Measures against garden grabbing include reallocation from brownfield category and binning density targets
The government is to give English councils more power to stop developers building homes on gardens.
Communities minister Greg Clark is expected to announce that gardens will be reclassified, removing them from the brownfield category that makes it easy to obtain permission to build housing on them.
The move is part of a package of measures to prevent so-called garden grabbing, which increases population density and reduces green space.
The package also includes the scrapping of housing density targets, instituted by Labour to specify a certain percentage of development floorspace for every hectare of land.
The British Property Federation has welcomed the move. Chief executive Liz Peace said: 鈥淲e won鈥檛 mourn the passing of density targets which, like most of the housing aspirations held by the last government, failed dismally to translate into any benefit for communities.
鈥淩esearch has shown that less housing was built at the peak of the housing boom after these targets came in than was before Labour came to power.鈥
However, the Federation of Master Builders (FMB) has attacked the planned measures, which it says ignores the crisis in housing provision, especially the need for more affordable homes.
Brian Berry, director of external affairs at the FMB, said: 鈥淚t is very disappointing that the government has decided to give priority to the issue of garden grabbing rather than help the thousands of families in this country that need an affordable home.
鈥淩eclassifying all gardens will inevitably mean even more pressure to build on the green belt and the countryside. What is need is a comprehensive review of the planning system to look at how we can allocate more land for housing.鈥
3 Readers' comments