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Comprehensive Development Areas

Comprehensive Development Areas. Policies of the 1960’s Hulme, Manchester. Zone of transition. Planners learn from their mistakes. Significance in social history. Life in Hulme’s crescents. Conceived in the 1960's & hailed as a showpiece of urban redevelopment.

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Comprehensive Development Areas

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  1. Comprehensive Development Areas Policies of the 1960’s Hulme, Manchester

  2. Zone of transition Planners learn from their mistakes.

  3. Significance in social history

  4. Life in Hulme’s crescents • Conceived in the 1960's & hailed as a showpiece of urban redevelopment. • Inspired by the Georgian terraces in Bath. Four years after being built, they had degenerated into modern-day slums, plagued by leaking roofs, cracks in the walls, a lack of security, high fuel bills, broken lifts, damp and noise. • Communal areas became crime hotspots. Lack of “defensible space” was an issue. • Sense of community disappeared. Problems of marginal members of society increased. • Flats built with extensive garage areas yet car ownership very low. • Demolition in 1998 followed period of “decapitation”. • Their notoriety was one of the factors which gave impetus to the extensive redevelopment of Hulme seen today. • Unemployment a feature of industrial decline during 1970’s & 1980’s was a further problem that needed addressing in a new wave of regeneration.

  5. Demolition October 1998

  6. New housing

  7. A rejuvenated landscape

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