This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/wales/7089759.stm
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Cities 'building too many flats' | Cities 'building too many flats' |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Too many flats and too few houses are being built in Wales's biggest cities, claims a leading planning expert. | Too many flats and too few houses are being built in Wales's biggest cities, claims a leading planning expert. |
Cardiff has seen the largest increase, with the number of new flats more than doubling in the past five years. | Cardiff has seen the largest increase, with the number of new flats more than doubling in the past five years. |
A decade ago, about 20% of new homes in Cardiff were flats; now it is nearly 70% in some developments. | |
Professor John Punter, of Cardiff University, said Wales's greenbelt land south of the M4 should be seen as the "natural repository of family housing". | Professor John Punter, of Cardiff University, said Wales's greenbelt land south of the M4 should be seen as the "natural repository of family housing". |
"We're turning into a kind of 'apartment city'," said the professor of urban design and director of Design Commission Wales. | |
He said: "In effect, what is happening to our housing market is it is becoming all apartments. | |
They don't make the little estates they used to have, it's just a lot of high-rise apartment blocks House hunter Claire Smith | |
"It does not cater for large sections of the community. Most apartments are one- and two-bedroom, so they are good for couples and people co-habiting and things like that. | "It does not cater for large sections of the community. Most apartments are one- and two-bedroom, so they are good for couples and people co-habiting and things like that. |
"But as soon as people have children, they'd have to move out. And where would they go? Where would the new housing be? | "But as soon as people have children, they'd have to move out. And where would they go? Where would the new housing be? |
"What's happening is that we're really not going to be building any new housing in Cardiff, the new family housing is going to be built up the valleys. | "What's happening is that we're really not going to be building any new housing in Cardiff, the new family housing is going to be built up the valleys. |
"That would be OK if the transport network linking Cardiff to the valleys was adequate to take that demand." | |
He called for a "more balanced allocation" of land for housing as a predominance of building on brownfield sites "almost invariably means apartments". | He called for a "more balanced allocation" of land for housing as a predominance of building on brownfield sites "almost invariably means apartments". |
Claire and Patrick Smith are renting a flat but want to buy a house | Claire and Patrick Smith are renting a flat but want to buy a house |
He said Swansea and Newport were "just beginning" the property-building boom Cardiff underwent from 2001. | |
One couple, Patrick and Claire Smith, are renting a flat in Cardiff Bay but are looking to buy, ideally a two- or three-bedroomed house with a back garden. | |
Mrs Smith said: "For us it's impossible at the moment. It's so expensive, over-inflated. There're very little affordable houses around. | Mrs Smith said: "For us it's impossible at the moment. It's so expensive, over-inflated. There're very little affordable houses around. |
"They don't make the little estates they used to have, it's just a lot of high-rise apartment blocks. | "They don't make the little estates they used to have, it's just a lot of high-rise apartment blocks. |
"We just feel we're banging our head against the wall trying to find something that's affordable." | "We just feel we're banging our head against the wall trying to find something that's affordable." |