regeneration: what can we learn from europe? max nathan, senior researcher centre for cities at ippr...

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Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr

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Page 1: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

Regeneration:what can we learn from Europe?

Max Nathan, Senior ResearcherCentre for Cities at ippr

Think 07, 2 May 2007

Page 2: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

The Centre for Cities

• What? An independent urban research unit based at ippr. Core sponsor is Lord Sainsbury

• Why? Taking a fresh look at how UK cities function, focusing on economic drivers

• When? Launched March 2005. Goes independent in 2008

• Where? London, Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham, Sunderland, Derby, Barnsley, Doncaster, Thurrock, Milton Keynes, Dundee … so far

Page 3: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

About this presentation

• Should we learn from Europe?

• How should we learn?

• An example: city centre living

• What else can we learn?

Page 4: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

Should we learn from Europe?

• Yes. The best European cities tend to perform better than American counterparts: higher growth vs segregation, social exclusion, sprawl

• But UK urban policy borrows heavily from the US: clusters, city growth strategies, welfare reform, mixed communities

• And US policy gurus play an important role in the UK

Page 5: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

Should we learn from Europe? (2)

• The British view of European cities: urban paradise

- loft living, trams, café culture, iconic buildings …

• UK government: inferiority complex? • Cheerleading for British cities, or fretting about their

underperformance

- ‘Core Cities have turned the corner’ (ODPM 2004)

- ‘Core Cities lag behind their European competitors’ (ODPM 2004)

Page 6: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

How should we learn?

• Are British cities actually doing worse? It’s hard to tell

- GDP per capita: London is 23rd in Europe, other Core Cities are a long way behind (Barclays Bank, 2001)

- GVA per capita: almost all big British cities outperform the European (and UK) average (ONS, 2001)

• Serious problems with the data: data holes, no standard definition of a city, differences between data suppliers

Page 7: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

How should we learn? (2)

• Borrowing policies should be more straightforward

• Policy concept: feasible, suitable, achievable • Policy context: fit, history

• No single ‘European City’ model: differences driven by national economic trends, policy systems, location

• Danger of ‘lofts and latté’

Page 8: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

Key finding 4: Direct impacts

Page 9: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

Key finding 4: Direct impacts

Page 10: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

City centre living

• What’s going on? rapid population growth, investment in economy, housing, infrastructure

• What’s the attraction? Proximity and buzz - Liverpool: 54% want to be central, 35% like urban life (CSR, 2004)

• Who’s there: young, single people who don’t stay long. Students, young professionals and low-income groups

• Problems: over-supply of small flats, lack of services, ‘conveyor belt effect’ as people move to popular suburbs

Page 11: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

Barcelona vs. Britain

• City centre living is a partial success: we’ve imported the buildings, but not the lifestyles

• Why is city centre living not more widespread? Lifestyle differences between UK and e.g. Spain:

- Shopping – Britons do supermarkets, Spaniards use small shops - Build – Britons prefer old buildings, Spaniards prefer new-build - Perceptions of flats – Britons aspire to houses, but in Spain flat-

living is the norm - Family life – Spaniards are happy to bring up children in flats- Second homes – in Spain owning second homes is the norm for

many middle class / wealthy households. In the UK, still rare

Page 12: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

What else can we learn?

• Metropolitan governance works well in e.g. France, Italy. But can take 10-15 years to bed in. Can the UK stick it out?

• City leadership – strong, visible, elected leadership pays off in e.g. Paris, Berlin. What’s the best model for the UK?

• Connectivity – integrated, well-funded urban transport in e.g. Berlin, Amsterdam. What can we learn from these cities, and from e.g. TfL in London?

Page 13: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

What else can we learn? (2)

• Public space – cities like Barcelona and Valencia build high quality public spaces, let local people ‘co-create’ them. How can we fine-tune public spaces in the UK?

• Urban innovation – cities like Helsinki, Stuttgart seem to drive forward innovative activity. What are the key features, and what transfers to the UK?

Page 14: Regeneration: what can we learn from Europe? Max Nathan, Senior Researcher Centre for Cities at ippr Think 07, 2 May 2007

Questions?

www.ippr.org/[email protected]