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Sustainable Construction and Planning in London

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Title: Sustainable Construction and Planning in London


1
Sustainable Construction and Planning in London
  • Yvonne Rydin, LSE
  • 17th May 2005
  • Y.Rydin_at_lse.ac.uk

2
The SusCon Project
  • HEFCE Innovation Fund
  • Academe-practice links
  • SusCon project runs to August 2006
  • Best practice on sustainable construction and
    London planning departments
  • Ecological Footprint methodology, baselines and
    sustainable construction strategies

3
The SusCon issue
  • RICS research suggested that 60 planners and
    surveyors aware of SD but felt they had limited
    knowledge, particularly practical and relevant
    knowledge
  • Another RICS report cited lack of relevant
    information as the most important barrier to SD

4
SusCon Best Practice 1
  • There is a lot of it about
  • A trawl of websites found 141 sites on
    sustainable construction, most including advice,
    guidance and best practice
  • London Sustainable Construction Projects scoping
    study found 207 initiatives that could contribute
    to a Code of Practice

5
SusCon Best Practice
  • It coves a huge range of issues
  • Land use e.g. density
  • Building materials e.g. embodied energy
    sustainable sources
  • Building design e.g. passive solar design
    renewable energy flooding adaptation
  • Construction process e.g. water efficiency
    habitat protection

6
Project Aim
  • To investigate how planners were drawing on
    available knowledge, particularly best practice
    knowledge in everyday planning practice
  • Theoretical reconceptualisation of BP
  • Empirical survey of planners

7
The Concept of BP
  • A form of knowledge resource held or used by the
    planner
  • Framed as what planners need to know
  • A new knowledge input to planning
  • Arises in specific contexts and then moved to
    different contexts

8
Reframing BP 1
  • Knowledge is a constructed category
  • Constituted as a set of claims
  • Requires recognition as knowledge within specific
    institutional contexts
  • Draw on Jasanoffs idea of co-construction of
    policy and knowledge
  • What counts as knowledge evolves alongside policy
    itself

9
Reframing BP 2
  • BP is translated and recontextualised to fit the
    specific local case
  • BP can be seen as a locally recognised mix of
    local and generalised knowledges
  • recognised as knowledge
  • recognised as policy relevant

10
Knowledge Management Literature
  • Availability as an active process involving
    filtering, searching, translating, forgetting and
    serendipity
  • Influence of organisational structure and culture
  • Resources and incentives for learning
    relationship to power and legitimacy in
    organisations and processes

11
Knowledge Management Literature
  • The role of individuals
  • bureaucratic behaviour and values
  • knowledge brokers/champions
  • relationship to politicians
  • Links to networks beyond the organisation

12
The Survey
  • On-line survey of London planners March-April
    2005
  • 56 response rate (81 respondents)
  • 9 follow-up interviews

13
The Respondents
  • 54 male, 46 female
  • 47 18-30 yrs, 38 31-50 yrs, 15 50 yrs
  • 54 work in development control
  • 21 worked in their LA for less than 1 year
  • 97 educated to undergraduate degree or higher,
    of which 82 obtained in the UK
  • 30 without professional membership
  • 25 belong to RTPI, 1 RIBA, 0 RICS

14
Planners feelings towards work
  • Majority feel valued in work (61 agree or
    strongly agree) that is of medium-high
    responsibility (89)
  • 64 agreed or strongly agreed that they had
    autonomy at work
  • but
  • 32 expect to leave their position within 1 year,
    62 within 5 years
  • Fits ALBPO study on retention/recruitment

15
When asked in general terms
  • The LPA effectively researches (69) and uses new
    knowledge (79)
  • It builds on current planning knowledge (63) and
    uses past learning (60)
  • It holds learning sessions and has a training
    budget
  • 67 agreed they had opportunities to learn
  • 94 said they shared knowledge and information
    with colleagues

16
More qualified answers.
  • Less than half (44) agreed that their job makes
    the best use of the knowledge they have
  • 42 thought there were incentives to learn but
    25 said there were not

17
When asked about SusCon knowledge
  • Only 5 felt very knowledgeable 19 felt not at
    all knowledgeable
  • 27 felt not at all able to advise applicants
  • 35 did not know if they had access to SusCon
    experts (inside or outside the LA)
  • 58 never or rarely discuss SusCon with others
    inside the LA 65 with others outside the LA

18
Of the 50 with access to SusCon BP
  • 55 often using SusCon best practice, whenever
    possible
  • 37 only using it when obliged to
  • 75 thought this information fitted well with
    their daily job

19
What is the problem?
  • Planners feel pressured
  • 70 agreed that they were pressured by time
    targets
  • Development control officers especially do not
    have the time to self-teach
  • While 43 agreed that they did have time for
    reflection on their work, 37 disagreed

20
What is the problem?
  • There are issues of access to knowledge
  • Not clear that LAs are ensuring only relevant
    knowledge reaches planners (27 agree 26
    disagree 40 neutral)
  • Not necessarily up-to-date (21 below average
    28 above only 9 very up to date)
  • 36 did not know if they had access to SusCon
    best practice

21
What is the problem?
  • Majority of planners research sustainable
    construction best practice independently
  • Google searches
  • RTPI, DEFRA, BRE sites
  • Planners complain that too much information is
    not user-friendly
  • Too technical
  • Documents too long
  • Documents too generalised

22
What is the problem?
  • Limited external consultation
  • departmental pride
  • competition with other local governments
  • lack of time
  • generalised nature of advice given
  • Those that do consult externally use
  • RTPI CPD seminar sessions
  • GLA (where major schemes referred on)
  • External consultants hired by developers

23
What is the problem?
  • The highly departmentalised context
  • 64 operate in very departmentalised LAs
  • These are all somewhat (62) or very (38)
    hierarchical
  • 70 had been recently reorganised
  • Few planners regularly consult with other
    departments located outside planning

24
What is the problem?
  • The routine nature of planners work
  • 62 agreed their work was rule bound
  • 43 said it was sometime routine another 25
    said it was often or always routine
  • Some local authorities have sustainability
    officers who research and consult this may limit
    learning for others

25
Back to the literature review
  • The Knowledge Management literature review
    emphasised that this organisational structure and
    pattern of working would inhibit learning
  • Most organisations seem to fall into the
    resistant or compliant categories with regard to
    knowledge management as opposed to responsive or
    auto-didact categories

26
The political and policy context
  • Unless made a statutory requirement, sustainable
    construction best practice will have little
    influence in the development control process,
    because
  • It will not hold up in public hearings if used to
    reject an application
  • Regeneration may be pursued at any cost anyway

27
The London Context
  • Local plans may be prioritised over London Plan
    (where SusCon is emphasised)
  • SPGs are too many, too thick, too tedious to
    review, and too confusing (e.g. The GLA SusCon
    SPG)

28
Wanted!
  • Need a common language that is simple to
    understand, user-friendly, explanatory and to the
    point about sustainable construction best
    practice measures
  • Planners predominantly suggested a simple,
    quick-to-reference sustainability checklist that
    would be available for each local authority to use

29
Sustainability Checklist
  • GLA commissioned WWF and BRE to prepare such a
    checklist
  • Draft in Summer 2005
  • GOL published a checklist emphasising adaptation
    to climate change (February 2005)
  • To be integrated

30
Next Stage
  • Action research with GLA and LDA on implementing
    the checklist
  • Complement with work on how BP travels vertically
    through EU, national, regional and local levels
  • 2 research officer posts available deadline end
    of May!
  • www.lse.ac.uk/collections/geographyAndEnvironment
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