Construction minister urges housebuilders to improve quality and density of urban housing developments.

Construction minister Nick Raynsford has attacked the quality of housing estates and urged housebuilders to improve design and increase density in urban redevelopments.

Speaking at Monday鈥檚 launch of the DETR鈥檚 new urban design guide, Raynsford pointed to several examples of what he called 鈥渂ad design鈥, including the Aylesbury Estate in Southwark, London.

Raynsford said the guide, which sets out design principles such as character, scale, appearance and diversity, would not tie urban developments to particular architectural styles. He said: 鈥淲e are not saying you have got to do it one way or another. It鈥檚 not one architectural style.鈥淚n recent years, there have been very, very poor quality developments, which have tawdry little boxes put together with no sense or feel for the area. It鈥檚 a cause of shame and disappointment.

鈥淚t cannot be right that you have developments with 23 dwellings or fewer per hectare. There are very high-quality developments that have densities of 30-40 per hectare which people are very happy to live in. 鈥滺e added: 鈥淨uality is fundamental. I would like to see housebuilders taking that to heart.鈥

Raynsford鈥檚 criticism was echoed by Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment chairman Stuart Lipton, who said that housing estate developers too often used the lowest common denominator as the basis for the design.

There have been very, very poor developments. It鈥檚 a cause of shame

Nick Raynsford

Lipton said: 鈥淗ousebuilders believe that the consumers want these shoe-boxes. But there are other aspects, such as light, space and uplifting design, that should be taken into consideration.鈥

The CABE chairman said the private sector should follow the lead of housing associations such as the Peabody Trust and the Joseph Rowntree Housing Trust when producing housing developments.

He said: 鈥淧eabody and Rowntree lead the pack in housing design and innovation. They are using good architects and modern methods and are creating sustainable developments. The challenge for the private sector is to keep up with them.鈥

The House Builders鈥 Federation welcomed Raynsford鈥檚 words, but warned that his concept of design and density was based on a London model and would not necessarily translate to the rest of the UK.

Good examples of urban developments cited by both Raynsford and Lipton were the Poundbury model village in Dorset, and urban regeneration schemes such as Brindleyplace in Birmingham.