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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 Policies of the 1960’s Hulme, Manchester
Zone of transition Planners learn from their mistakes.
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.