Interim London Housing Design Guide
Interim London Housing Design Guide
Interim London Housing Design Guide
INTERIM EDITION
Design for London August 2010 Published by London Development Agency Palestra 197 Blackfriars Road London SE1 8AA www.lda.gov.uk enquiries 020 7593 9000 text phone 020 7593 8001 This report is available online at:
http://www.lda.gov.uk/publications-and-media/publications/design-guide.aspx http://www.designforlondon.gov.uk/uploads/media/Interim_London_Housing_Design_Guide.pdf
Contents
Foreword Introduction Development of the London Housing Design Guide Using the Guide Summary Table of London Housing Design Guide Standards
04 05 08 09 11
Standards
1.0 Shaping Good Places 2.0 Housing for a Diverse City 3.0 From Street to Front Door 4.0 Dwelling Space Standards 5.0 Home as a Place of Retreat 6.0 Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation 7.0 Managing the Design Process 18 26 32 44 62 70 80
Appendices
1 Space Standards Study 2 Furniture Schedule 3 Wheelchair Accessible Housing Design Standards 4 Denitions 5 References 92 94 96 102 103
Foreword
The nest city in the world deserves the nest housing. In building Londons future we reect on a past that has created some of the best buildings and urban spaces to be found anywhere in the world. More recently, though, too much of our new housing has sacriced space and quality to unit numbers. New homes in London are some of the smallest in Western Europe and this is indefensible. I am determined to see a new generation of standards which improve London's housing and we have a unique opportunity to deliver these now. If we are to renew the capital's tradition of design excellence, we must understand the thinking behind the city's design achievements and its failures. This understanding will ensure that we create homes people want to live in and in which they and their families can ourish, now and in the future. My London Housing Strategy promotes excellence in design quality and sustainability. This guide underpins that commitment and is the rst step to making it a reality. The strengthening collaboration between the London Development Agency and the Homes and Communities Agency has brought together the largest sources of funding for social housing and urban regeneration in the capital. The design standards set out in this guide will be applied immediately to LDA supported projects. I am also pleased that the HCA London Board has agreed that the new standards will be applied to new schemes applying for funding from April 2011 and to all tenures on its own land holdings. I encourage all
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others involved in the creation of new homes to embrace this guidance. My draft replacement London Plan is taking this challenge forward across all tenures. It incorporates a range of policies and guidance for housing design, including a new generation of minimum space standards. This will be supported by detailed supplementary guidance on housing to support implementation. I have considered carefully the wide range of comments from all sectors of the development industry, submitted to me during the public consultation process on the draft guide. This interim edition is my response, and it sets out and explains my aspirations for the design of new housing in London. As well as applying to LDA supported projects, it signposts my aspirations to improve the quality of the design of homes in London, which will be carried forward through HCA funding requirements, the replacement London Plan and its associated supplementary guidance. Above all, the objective of this guidance is not only to deliver housing units but to provide beautiful and appropriate homes of the highest quality that respond to the complex design challenges posed by this most dynamic of cities.
Introduction
This interim edition of the Mayors London Housing Design Guide (LHDG) has been revised following public consultation on the draft LHDG in 2009 and the ndings of a cost and delivery impact analysis. It is being published to show the direction of travel of the nal guide, to shape the design of London Development Agency (LDA) supported developments, and to encourage all involved in the design of new housing to embrace the Mayors aspirations. The guide is not a statement of planning policy. Planning guidance for all housing tenures is contained in the draft replacement London Plan and its draft Supplementary Planning Guidance on Housing. The nal guide will be issued following the nalisation of the Homes and Communities Agencys (HCA) consultation on its Proposed Core Housing Design and Sustainability Standards and the draft replacement London Plan Examination in Public, incorporating any necessary changes arising from these processes to ensure all design guidance is in alignment. At the core of the guide are new minimum space standards. The guide also advocates improvements in the development and procurement processes so that design remains valued from vision to delivery. Together these support the Mayors aspiration to help build a better, more humane and more beautiful city, with great housing at its heart. The Challenge of London This is a guide for London, and takes into account the diversity and complexity of its built environment and its social composition.
London's population is projected to grow to 8.8 million by 2031, and this promises to keep demand for housing high. At the same time London aspires to become a world leader in tackling climate change, and currently faces the uncertainty of gradual recovery from recession. The ambition to improve the quality of life for Londoners and the quality of the city's places and spaces is a particular challenge against this background. The Design Challenge: A New London Vernacular We are building places to live in a city with unique character, with examples of great housing and city-making at a range of densities. Londons terraced houses, apartment buildings, streets, squares and the best of 20th century development have created highly successful residential environments with enduring appeal. This guide aspires to encourage a new London vernacular that can take its place in this rich fabric. A new vernacular does not propose a singular architectural style, but recognises that the best housing comes from robust guidelines in planning and regulation, together with a deep understanding of particular architectural and social contexts on the part of designers and developers. There are certain qualities that characterise the best parts of London that this guidance seeks to encourage. London has many great urban places created by housing. We want to encourage housing that has a clear and sophisticated urban intention, and improves and civilises the streets and public spaces around it.
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Introduction continued
London in general has a street-based urban arrangement. Essential to successful housing is an understanding of the hierarchy of streets in an area. Some are vital and busy, others are quieter. Good housing should add to the continuous, connected urban fabric of London. All this demands great design to successfully deliver. The best areas of housing in London very often have strong and singular characters, often because of a consistent architectural expression and the widespread use of high-quality materials. In general, Londons housing should not be striving for iconic architecture, but should focus on great background architecture made of durable materials that weather well. There is a demand in London for diverse dwelling types, and this guide describes how these can be mixed together without segregation by type or tenure, to make places where everyone can feel a sense of belonging. In recent years, some less successful trends have emerged in the development industry. In building so many over-dense apartment blocks with internal corridors serving small, singleaspect dwellings, we have risked creating a damaging legacy for future generations. A fundamental aim of this guidance is to ensure that London's housing is exible and accessible in use and adaptable over the life of a building. Housing should support family life, both in the exibility and adaptability of homes and in the provision, in greater quantities, of larger homes. The minimum space standards in this guide aim to ensure that homes have the long-term adaptability to suit growing
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families or new owners and tenants. New dwellings must be accessible to the widest possible range of people at all stages of life, including disabled and older people. The ability to quickly and cheaply adapt a home when our circumstances change is particularly important in an ageing society where many of us want to maintain our quality of life, maximise our independence and stay in our own homes for as long as possible. This guide also recognises that quality of detail is essential to really successful housing, and should not be seen as secondary to good urban planning or the arrangement of dwellings. Beautiful doors, ceramic tiles, elegant balustrades little details like these can help housing developments go beyond the perfunctory, and add delight and dignity to people's daily lives. Housing Standards Housing standards have been used in the past to effect a step change in housing quality. The best known set of UK housing standards is the 1961 report Homes for Today and Tomorrow by the Parker Morris Committee, the primary concern of which was to ensure that every council-built home had enough space, along with satisfactory heating and sanitation. Today the priority of providing adequate space and amenity is the same, but attention has rightly turned to the quality of provision across all tenures, and whether dwellings are t for all. In recent years London has been providing some of the smallest homes in the developed world and too many developments of a low quality.
This is not something to be proud of and is not sustainable. The new London standards and guidance are intended to encourage provision of enough space in dwellings to ensure homes can be exibly used by a range of residents. They also aim to ensure that space can be sensibly allocated to different functions, with adequate room sizes and storage integrated into the planning. We must also use water, fuel and other limited resources in the most efcient way possible, to reduce carbon emissions and minimise the environmental impact of new development. Standards alone are no guarantee of quality; they must be underpinned by robust forms of procurement and long-term management plans. Section 7, Managing the Design Process, deals with the development process to help ensure that the best design intentions are delivered on the ground. The last decade has seen an array of design guidance issued by a variety of agencies. As a result, there is more emphasis than ever on excellence in design and sustainability and that is to be welcomed. This design guide does not aim to add yet another layer of policies and advice, but is derived from existing best practice guidelines, simplied and adapted to t the capitals needs.
the existing character of the area. 2.0 Housing for a Diverse City: designing for a mix of housing sizes, types and tenures, at appropriate densities. 3.0 From Street to Front Door: guidance on the design of shared circulation areas and the entrance and approach to a group of ats or individual dwelling. 4.0 Dwelling Space Standards: new minimum space standards and guidance on the size and layout of different rooms, including minimum sizes for storage and private outdoor space. 5.0 Home as a Place of Retreat: design guidance for privacy, dual aspect dwellings, noise, oor-to-ceiling heights, daylight and sunlight. 6.0 Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation: clarifying the London approach to the implementation of the Code for Sustainable Homes in relation to London Plan policy.
The Consultation Process The draft LHDG was published for public consultation in July 2009. This produced a constructive and wide-ranging debate on the implications of the guide for the future of housing developments in London. There was overall support for the aspirations of the draft: to encourage good design and to deliver high-quality, well-designed homes built to a high standard. The Mayor has carefully considered the responses received and the ndings of the cost impact analysis commissioned by the HCA, GLA and LDA. The changes made to the draft London Housing Design Guide reect a balance between achieving high quality housing against the objective of increasing the overall supply of housing in London.
What is the purpose of this edition? This interim edition of the Mayors London Housing Design Guide (LHDG) follows the cost impact assessment and the public consultation on the draft LHDG. It shows the Mayors ambition for excellent housing design and indicates the direction of travel for the nal guide. A nal version of the guide will align with the new London Plan and Housing Supplementary Planning Guidance and the HCA design standards review. Who is the Mayors Interim LHDG intended for? This document is primarily addressed to housing developers, RSLs, architects, and borough planning ofcers in London. In the rst instance the Mayor will require that the full content of the Interim LHDG be applied to developments that are supported by the LDA or on LDA land. However, others are encouraged to embrace the guidance and support the Mayors ambition to improve the quality of housing in London. Which existing policy, standards and guidelines have been incorporated in the LHDG? The LHDG incorporates proposed London Plan policy, the Lifetime Homes standards (2010 edition), and the key components of Building for Life, Secured by Design and the Code for Sustainable Homes, and it also draws on other good practice guidance. The standards of the GLA Best Practice Guide for Wheelchair Accessible Housing are incorporated in appendix 3. How is the Mayors LHDG intended to be read? The summary table in the next section offers
a quick reference to the standards, and the text in each section of the document provides a comprehensive explanation of what they seek to achieve and how they can be implemented. The LHDG is intended to be read in full at the earliest stages of a project and used from early conceptual design and capacity testing through to full planning and detailed design. The guide is clear that good results rely on a good process as well as good design. Section 7 of this document offers advice on managing the design and development process in order to deliver successful schemes. What is the difference between Priority 1 and Priority 2 standards? It is expected that all developments supported by the LDA will meet the full range of standards set out in this guide. The standards in the draft Housing Supplementary Planning Guidance (SPG) of the draft replacement London Plan are aligned with the standards in this guide and are categorised as either Priority 1 or Priority 2 standards. Priority 1 standards must be met in full, while Priority 2 standards are strongly recommended as best practice but not required. How does the LHDG relate to the draft SPG of the draft replacement London Plan (DRLP)? This guide complements these documents, but does not, in itself, constitute either a statement of planning policy or Supplementary Planning Guidance. The guide illustrates the exemplary application of standards contained in the draft Housing SPG and the DRLP. It encourages designers
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to produce housing of the highest quality and not just an acceptable standard. How does the LHDG relate to the new HCA standards? The HCA London Board, which is chaired by the Mayor, has agreed the objective of achieving a set of funding design standards in London, which align with the requirements of the London Housing Design Guide and Housing SPG. The funding standards for the HCA in London will draw on the draft core national HCA standards framework and be supplemented by additional requirements, which bring these into alignment with the standards in the LHDG and Housing SPG. These standards will begin to be applied to funding decisions from April 2011. They will become mandatory for funding from April 2012. Reference should be made to HCA London for information on how the standards will be interpreted into funding requirements. What are the next steps? The nal version of this guide will be published after the end of the DRLP Examination in Public and the nalisation of the HCA's Proposed Core Housing Design and Sustainability standards and the DRLP and Housing SPG. In the intervening time, the guidance in the LHDG will continue to be rened, incorporating any changes arising from these processes. The Mayor is committed to ensuring the housing design standards of the Housing SPG, the nal LHDG and the HCA London will be in full alignment
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Priority 1
Priority 2
1.1.2
1.2 1.2.1
1.2.2
1.2.3
2.0
2.1 2.1.1
Priority 1
Priority 2
2.2 2.2.1
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3.0
3.1 3.1.1 3.1.2
Priority 1
Priority 2
3.1.3 3.1.4
3.2.3 3.2.4
3.2.5
3.2.6
3.2.7
3.2.8
3.3 3.3.1
3.3.2
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3.3.3
Careful consideration should be given to the siting and organisation of car parking within an overall design for open space so that car parking does not negatively affect the use and appearance of open spaces. Where car parking is within the dwelling plot, at least one car parking space should be capable of enlargement to a width of 3300mm. Where parking is provided in communal bays, at least one space with a width of 3300mm should be provided per block entrance or access core in addition to spaces designated for wheelchair user dwellings [Lifetime Homes Criterion 1]. Cycle Storage All developments should provide dedicated storage space for cycles at the following levels: 1 per 1 or 2 bedroom dwelling; or 2 per 3 or more bedroom dwelling Individual or communal cycle storage outside the home should be secure, sheltered and adequately lit, with convenient access to the street. Where cycle storage is provided within the home, it should be in addition to the minimum GIA and minimum storage and circulation space requirements. Cycle storage identied in habitable rooms or on balconies will not be considered acceptable. Refuse, Post and Deliveries Communal refuse and recycling containers, communal bin enclosures and refuse stores should be accessible to all residents including children and wheelchair users, and located on a hard, level surface. The location should satisfy local requirements for waste collection and should achieve full credits under the Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide. Refuse stores within buildings should be located to limit the nuisance caused by noise and smells and provided with means for cleaning. Storage facilities for waste and recycling containers should be provided in accordance with the Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide and local authority requirements.
3.3.4
3.4 3.4.1
3.4.2
3.5 3.5.1
3.5.2
4.0
4.1 4.1.1
Priority 1
Priority 2
For dwellings designed for more than 6 people, at least 10 sq m gross internal area should be added for each additional person.
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4.1.2
Dwelling plans should demonstrate that dwellings will accommodate the furniture, access and activity space requirements relating to the declared level of occupancy. Refer to appendix 3 for design standards for wheelchair accessible housing. Flexibility and Adaptability Dwelling plans should demonstrate that dwelling types provide exibility by allowing for alternative seating arrangements in living rooms and by accommodating double or twin beds in at least one double bedroom. Circulation in the Home The minimum width of hallways and other circulation spaces inside the home should be 900mm. This may reduce to 750mm at pinch points e.g. next to radiators, where doorway widths meet the following specication: Minimum clear opening width of doorway (mm) 750 775 900 Minimum approach width (when approach is not head on) (mm) 1200 1050 900
4.2 4.2.1
4.3 4.3.1
Where a hallway is at least 900mm wide and the approach to the door is head-on, a minimum clear opening door width of 750mm should be provided [Lifetime Homes Criterion 6]. 4.3.2 The design of dwellings of more than one storey should incorporate potential for a stair lift to be installed and a suitable identied space for a through-the-oor lift from the entrance level to a storey containing a main bedroom and an accessible bathroom [Lifetime Homes Criterion 12]. Living, Dining and Kitchen Areas The following combined oor areas for living / kitchen / dining space should be met: Designed level of occupancy 2 person 3 person 4 person 5 person 6 person Minimum combined oor area of living, dining and kitchen spaces (sq m) 23 25 27 29 31 A
4.4 4.4.1
4.4.2 4.4.3
The minimum width of the main sitting area should be 2.8m in 2-3 person dwellings and 3.2m in dwellings designed for four or more people. Dwellings with three or more bedrooms should have two living spaces, for example a living room and a kitchen-dining room. Both rooms should have external windows. If a kitchen is adjacent to the living room, the internal partition between the rooms should not be loadbearing, to allow for reconguration as an open plan arrangement. Studies will not be considered as second living spaces. There should be space for turning a wheelchair in dining areas and living rooms and basic circulation space for wheelchairs elsewhere [Lifetime Homes Criterion 7]. A living room, living space or kitchen-dining room should be at entrance level [Lifetime Homes Standard 8]. A A
4.4.4 4.4.5
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4.4.6
Windows in the principal living space should start 800mm above nished oor level (+/- 50mm) to allow people to see out while seated. At least one opening window should be easy to approach and operate by people with restricted movement and reach. [Lifetime Homes Criterion 15]. Bedrooms The minimum area of a single bedroom should be 8 sq m. The minimum area of a double or twin bedroom should be 12 sq m. The minimum width of double and twin bedrooms should be 2.75m in most of the length of the room. In homes of two or more storeys with no permanent bedroom at entrance level, there should be space on the entrance level that could be used as a convenient temporary bed space [Lifetime Homes Criterion 9]. Structure above a main bedroom and an accessible bathroom should be capable of supporting a ceiling hoist and the design should allow for a reasonable route between this bedroom and bathroom [Lifetime Homes Criterion 13]. Bathrooms and WCs Dwellings designed for an occupancy of ve or more people should provide a minimum of one bathroom with WC and one additional WC. Where there is no accessible bathroom at entrance level, a wheelchair accessible WC with potential for a shower to be installed should be provided at entrance level [Lifetime Homes Criterion 10]. An accessible bathroom should be provided in every dwelling on the same storey as a main bedroom [Lifetime Homes Criterion 14]. Walls in bathrooms and WCs should be capable of taking adaptations such as handrails [Lifetime Homes Criterion 11]. Storage and Utility Built-in general internal storage space free of hot water cylinders and other obstructions, with a minimum internal height of 2m and a minimum area of 1.5 sq m should be provided for 2 person dwellings, in addition to storage provided by furniture in habitable rooms. For each additional occupant an additional 0.5 sq m of storage space is required. Study and Work Dwelling plans should demonstrate that all homes are provided with adequate space and services to be able to work from home. The Code for Sustainable Homes guidance on working from home is recommended as a reference. Service controls should be within a height band of 450mm to 1200mm from the oor and at least 300mm away from any internal room corner [Lifetime Homes Criterion 16]. Wheelchair User Dwellings Ten percent of new housing should be designed to be wheelchair accessible or easily adaptable for residents who are wheelchair users in accordance with the GLA Best Practice Guide, Wheelchair Accessible Housing. Refer to appendix 3 for design standards for wheelchair accessible housing. Private Open Space A minimum of 5 sq m of private outdoor space should be provided for 1-2 person dwellings and an extra 1 sq m should be provided for each additional occupant. Private outdoor spaces should have level access from the home [Lifetime Homes Criterion 4]. The minimum depth and width of all balconies and other private external spaces is 1500mm.
A A
4.5.4
A A
4.8 4.8.1
A A A
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5.0
5.1 5.1.1
Priority 1
Priority 2
A A
6.0
6.1 6.1.1 6.1.2 6.2 6.2.1
Priority 1
Priority 2
A A
Overheating Development proposals should demonstrate how the design of dwellings will avoid overheating during summer months without reliance on energy intensive mechanical cooling systems. Water New dwellings should be designed to ensure that a maximum of 105 litres of water is consumed per person per day. A A
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Where development is permitted in an area at risk of ooding, it should incorporate ood resilient design in accordance with PPS25. New development should adhere to standards for surface water run-off as set out in the Code for Sustainable Homes. New development should incorporate Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems and green roofs where appropriate. Materials All new residential development should meet the requirements of the Code Level 4 with regard to using materials with lower environmental impacts over their lifecycle. All new residential development should accord with Code for Sustainable Homes Level 4 and the London Sustainable Design and Construction SPG with regard to the sourcing of materials. Ecology The design and layout of new residential development should avoid areas of ecological value and seek to enhance the ecological capital of the area in accordance with GLA best practice guidance on biodiversity and nature conservation.
A A A
A A
* In the Lifetime Homes Criteria a stair providing easy access is dened as one having maximum risers of 170mm, minimum goings of 250mm and a minimum width of 900mm measured 450mm above the pitch line. In the Lifetime Homes Criteria the entrance level of a dwelling is generally deemed to be the storey containing the main entrance door. Where there are no rooms on the storey containing the main entrance door (e.g. ats over garages or shops and some duplexes and townhouses) the rst storey level containing a habitable or non-habitable room can be considered the entrance level, if this storey is reached by a stair providing easy access, as dened above.
Balconies and terraces over habitable rooms which require a step up to increase slab thickness / insulation are exempt from the Lifetime Homes level access standard.
Dwellings over more than one storey with no more than two bedrooms may instead be designed with a Part M compliant WC at entrance level. The WC should provide a oor drain to allow for an accessible shower to be installed at a later date.
Adequate xing and support for grab rails should be available at any location on all walls within a height band of 300mm - 1800mm from the oor.
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The Mayor wants Londons new housing to shape great places in the city, places people can identify with, which raise the spirit and represent the aspirations and ambitions of our times. Housing is seldom about making iconic buildings that are at odds with their contexts. New houses and apartment buildings will be the lasting background to our daily lives. They should be a pleasure for people to walk past
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every day, through their civility, quality of materials, character and generosity towards the public realm. Housing makes up the majority of the citys built environment and we have an opportunity to create a beautiful and enduring legacy of homes that belong in London, and nowhere else.
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Character and Context The best developments are those designed with a sensitive understanding of their urban context, valuing the characteristics of the place and community. It matters how our housing looks. Each building plays a part in the city and its architecture should contribute to the character of a part of London. The most successful residential areas in London generally have a strong and consistent architectural character. New developments often struggle to make coherent places. Because of this, the Mayor encourages a design approach that carefully responds to the whole context of a development and builds on an understanding of the place, the observation of existing assets, and the local authoritys existing vision or spatial strategy for the area. Through the designers choice of scale, material, massing and building type, development should respect the existing character and urban grain of a place and build on the positive elements. Where a spatial strategy is already in place, this should be respected, and designers should demonstrate how new development contributes to the vision and strategy for the area. Where no such guidance is in place, those who propose bolder change should undertake an inclusive process that allows for a coherent vision for the future of the area to be developed and realised. Well-connected and Legible Woven through the city is an intricate network of public spaces made up of streets, squares, paths, lanes, mews,
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gardens and parks. This is the framework of London, allowing people to get where they want to go and to enjoy spending time outdoors in the city. Parts of the city that work well have a safe network of connected spaces and routes for pedestrians, cyclists and vehicles that is easy to understand and navigate. Each new development should connect into and extend the surrounding network and show an understanding of the hierarchy of these routes. Urban spaces are most successful when it is inherently clear who is meant to use them. It is important to ensure that outdoor spaces are inviting and accessible, and that they engender a sense of ownership amongst the people who are intended to use them. There should also always be clear distinctions between spaces that are for public and private use. The arrangement of uses and the architectural expression of a development have a signicant effect on the character of streets and public spaces, and whether or not they become well-loved and wellused spaces. Placing entrances and windows on street frontages and around public spaces brings activity which in turn increases neighbourliness and security by passive surveillance1. To those inside looking out, it also gives an important sense of belonging to the wider world. In contrast, when public spaces are anked by extensive windowless elevations, exposed undercroft parking or refuse and cycle stores, this is at best a missed opportunity, and at worst a catalyst for anti-social behaviour.
Standards 1.1.1
Development proposals should demonstrate: how the design responds to its physical context, including the character and legibility of the area and the local pattern of building, public space, landscape and topography; how the scheme relates to the identied character of the place and to the local vision and strategy or how bolder change is justied in relation to a coherent set of ideas for the place expressed in the local vision and strategy or agreed locally.
1.1.2
Development proposals should demonstrate: how the scheme complements the local network of public spaces, including how it integrates with existing streets and paths; how public spaces and pedestrian routes are designed to be overlooked and safe, and extensive blank elevations onto the public realm at ground oor have been avoided; for larger developments, how any new public spaces including streets and paths are designed on the basis of an understanding of the planned role and character of these spaces within the local movement network, and how new spaces relate to the local vision and strategy for the area.
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Designing housing always means making a new part of the public realm of the city. In all new housing we need to give as much consideration to the shape, scale and qualities of the spaces between buildings as to the buildings themselves. Open space, particularly green open space, is especially valuable in the city. In addition to benets to health and well-being, green space can also help London adapt to the effects of climate change by soaking up rainwater, attenuating ooding, and providing cooler environments. Sustainable urban drainage can also be achieved in hard external areas with permeable surfaces. Designers and developers should undertake a review of existing open spaces in the area and take account of the requirements set by individual boroughs in their Local Development Frameworks (LDFs) and Open Space Strategies, based on the London Plan benchmark public open space hierarchy2. New proposals for open space should respond to scale and setting, complement what exists and address deciencies in local provision as well as serving new residents. Proposals are best negotiated with the local borough and opportunities for community involvement should always be explored. Larger residential developments will need a landscape strategy which considers the full range of possible provision, including outdoor sport and play facilities, local parks and other public spaces. Even small housing developments invariably provide an opportunity to add to the quality of the public realm through tree planting, street furniture and the
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use of high quality materials, details and workmanship in streets and other spaces. Communal spaces3 designed to be shared by a smaller group of residents can work well in small and large developments. The most successful examples are overlooked by the households that share the space, engendering a sense of ownership among residents. Orientation is important. Spaces that receive some direct sunlight are used more frequently and enjoyed for longer periods throughout the year. Enduring success depends heavily on good stewardship, and thought should be given, at the outset, to the way in which public and shared open spaces will be managed and maintained. In the initial design stage of a project, great attention should be paid to the location and organisation of car parking, to ensure amenity space is preserved and the public realm is not dominated by parked cars. This can become a problem if not enough thought is given to the relationship between housing density, building type and the type of parking provision. Possibilities for on-site parking including undercroft and on-street parking should always be explored in preference to providing extensive open areas of surface car parking. Play Play is vital to child development. It is the means by which children explore ideas, learn social skills and make discoveries. The London Plan requires all development proposals including
2. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Table 3D.1 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Table 7.2 3. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 3D.13 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 3.6
4. Providing for Children and Young People's Play and Information Recreation SPG, GLA, March 2008
housing to provide for play and informal recreation4. The appropriate size or type of play space (or spaces) will depend on the existing provision in the area, the size and make-up of the child population including additional need created by the new housing and the nature of the development in its context. Guidance is provided by the Mayors Supplementary Planning Guidance Providing for Children
and Young Peoples Play and Informal Recreation. Where dedicated playgrounds are provided, designers should ensure that they are integrated with surrounding social spaces and buildings. Ensuring play spaces are overlooked and secure is vital to their success. Consideration should also be given to the access needs of disabled children and carers.
If area is decient in play space for 511s, some on-site facilities should be provided
If area is within 400m of existing facilities for 511s, an offsite contribution may be considered if in accordance with Play Strategy
If area is within 800m of existing facilities for 12+, an off-site contribution may be considered if in accordance with Play Strategy
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Standards 1.2.1
Development proposals should demonstrate that they comply with the borough's open space strategies, ensuring that a review of surrounding open space is undertaken and that opportunities to address a deciency in provision by providing new public open spaces are taken forward in the design process.
5. Secured by Design, New Homes, and Secured by Design, Playing Areas, Association of Chief Police Ofcers, 2010 6. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 4B.5/ DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 7.2 7. Based on Building for Life, criterion 16
1.2.2
For developments with a potential occupancy of ten children or more, development proposals should make appropriate play provision in accordance with the London Plan SPG, Providing for Children and Young Peoples Play and Informal Recreation.
1.2.3
Where communal open space is provided, development proposals should demonstrate that the space: is overlooked by surrounding development5; is accessible to wheelchair users and other disabled people; is designed to take advantage of direct sunlight6; has suitable management arrangements in place7.
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The best areas of London are places where people young and old, from different backgrounds and with different economic means and physical abilities can live side by side. This guide aims to ensure that every area of London accommodates the diversity of the city's population, and encourages new development to consider not just the initial occupiers of a home, but possible future tenants and owners. One of the key challenges of housing for Londoners
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is to ensure that dwellings for smaller households will cater for people as they get partners, have children and grow older. London has a great diversity of urban and suburban contexts, and we need to ensure that all new housing is built at a sustainable density, appropriate to its location. We also need to ensure that new development accommodates the other uses and activities that support daily life.
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relationship between density and housing type should be carefully considered in the early stages of design development.
8. London Plan, GLA, February 2008, Policy 3A.3/ DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 3.4
Standards 2.1.1
Development proposals should demonstrate how the density of residential accommodation satises London Plan policy relating to public transport accessibility level (PTAL) and the accessibility of local amenities and services, and is appropriate to the location in London8.
London Plan Density Matrix (habitable rooms and dwellings per hectare):
Setting Public Transport Accessibility Level (PTAL) 0 to 1 Suburban 3.84.6 hr/unit 3.13.7 hr/unit 2.73.0 hr/unit Urban 3.8 4.6 hr/unit 3.13.7 hr/unit 2.73.0 hr/unit Central 3.84.6 hr/unit 3.13.7 hr/unit 2.73.0 hr/unit 150200 hr/ha 3555 u/ha 4065 u/ha 5075 u/ha 150250 hr/ha 3565 u/ha 4080 u/ha 5095 u/ha 150300 hr/ha 3580 u/ha 40100 u/ha 50110 u/hr 2 to 3 150250 hr/ha 3565 u/ha 4080 u/ha 5095 u/ha 200450 hr/ha 45120 u/ha 55145 u/ha 70170 u/ha 300650 hr/ha 65170 u/ha 80210 u/ha 100240 u/ha 4 to 6 200350 hr/ha 4590 u/ha 55115 u/ha 70130 u/ha 200700 hr/ha 45185 u/ha 55225 u/ha 70260 u/ha 6501100 hr/ha 140290 u/ha 175355 u/ha 215405 u/ha
Appropriate density ranges are related to setting in terms of location, existing building form and massing, and the index of public transport accessibility (PTAL). The setting can be dened as: central areas with very dense development, a mix of different uses, large building footprints and typically buildings of four to six storeys, located within 800 metres walking distance of an International, Metropolitan or Major town centre. urban areas with predominantly dense development such as, for example, terraced houses, mansion blocks, a mix of different uses, medium building footprints and typically buildings of two to four storeys, located within 800 metres walking distance of a District centre or, along main arterial routes suburban areas with predominantly lower density development such as, for example, detatched and semi-detatched houses, predominantly residential, small building footprints and typically buildings of two to three storeys.
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The London Plan seeks to ensure that residential developments provide an appropriate mix of housing types, sizes and tenures that can meet the full range of housing needs in neighbourhoods. It requires individual boroughs to specify, control and monitor the proportion and number of dwellings of each type provided in new developments. Mix of Dwelling Sizes Boroughs have an essential role to play in balancing the supply of housing for larger and smaller households and ensuring an adequate number of homes for larger families are provided, right across the city. The last decade has been characterised by high-rise, high-density housing providing predominantly one- and two- bedroom ats often marketed towards young professionals. We cannot assume that people will follow a pattern of starting out in a at, moving to a house when they have children and moving back into a smaller dwelling in old age. New housing needs to be designed with a range of people of different ages and backgrounds in mind who may occupy the home over its lifetime. To make dwellings built for smaller households suitable for a wider range of people including families with children, we need to explore different models of housing. These will include maisonettes, a type that can deliver successful family housing at moderate densities. Where family ats are included in higher density development, developers must ensure that these provide at least some of the amenity afforded by houses, including private outdoor space.
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Providing a mix of dwelling sizes has broad benets in creating more balanced and sustainable communities9. Day to day, a good mix contributes to community safety, not least because some homes are more likely to be occupied throughout the day. At the same time, real thought needs to be given to who will live in a new development and to the management issues that may result from the proposed mix of dwelling sizes. The extent to which housing for large families is mixed with one and two bedroom dwellings requires particular consideration. Demographic evidence also points to the need for new housing which specically meets the needs and aspirations of older people10. The supply of specialised housing, including wheelchair accessible and adaptable housing, has similarly failed to meet demand. Homes that are built for, or are easily adaptable to the needs of wheelchair users should be integrated into all development proposals, as required by the London Plan. Mix of Tenure A mix of tenure helps to address social exclusion. Communities with a mix of household incomes should be promoted across London, in small developments as well as larger schemes. A balanced mix of tenures should be sought, particularly in neighbourhoods where social renting predominates11. The design of buildings and spaces should be tenure blind whereby homes for affordable rent, intermediate forms of tenure and private sale are indistinguishable from one another in terms of design quality, appearance or location within a site.
9. Based on Building for Life criterion 2 10. Housing our Ageing Population Panel for Innovation Report (HAPPI), HCA, 2009 11. Based on Building for Life criterion 3
Different tenures should be integrated across the site as far as possible and large groups of any single tenure avoided. It is acknowledged, that complete pepperpotting, with mixed-tenure cores, often raises management issues and can have implications for resident service charges, particularly where lifts are involved. At the same time, we should consider that tenure often changes over the life of a dwelling. A key reason for the Mayors commitment to universal space standards is a desire to facilitate this uidity. Mix of Uses Good neighbourhoods are about more than just good housing. The Mayor wants all new development to contribute to creating stronger neighbourhoods and lively places with a good range of services and amenities. People should be able to get to a station or bus stop, shop for food or relax in a park, caf or pub within comfortable walking distance of their home. The best neighbourhoods are enjoyed by people of all ages, regardless of physical ability or nancial means. These are places that people come to love for both the physical environment and the social relationships they encourage. Proposals for larger residential developments should assess the need for community and ancillary services such as shops, local health and education facilities. The proximity and capacity of existing facilities will determine whether or not non-residential uses within development proposals are suitable. Public and commercial uses at street level are therefore encouraged in appropriate
locations, where these uses are needed and can be supported. In situations where the future viability of non-residential uses is uncertain, it may be desirable to design ground oor dwellings to allow for conversion to other uses at a later date. Combining different uses brings its own design challenges. Noise mitigation, deliveries, refuse collection, services, parking and access to homes and amenity space need even more careful design consideration in these circumstances, if the quality of home life is to be protected. Where there are adjacent non-residential uses, care should be taken in the design of new residential development to avoid compromising the day to day functioning and long-term viability of those uses. The management of buildings with multiple landlords should inform the design from the earliest stages and long-term management responsibilities should be dened in a joint management plan prior to Practical Completion.
Standards 2.2.1
Development proposals should demonstrate how the mix of dwelling sizes and the mix of tenures meet strategic and local borough targets and are appropriate to the location in London.
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The thresholds, front doors, common areas and walkways of a building can transform the perceived value of a home and help people feel proud of where they live. A central aim of this guide is to promote common areas that are well designed, welcoming and accessible to all, accompanied by management arrangements that are robust and viable in the long term. People value the design and management of interior and exterior shared spaces very highly, and arrangements well made can improve the safety and security of residents.
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A driving concern for the design of groups of dwellings is to ensure that shared spaces outside and within buildings become places residents feel are intended for them. Many recent developments create spaces that are alienating in scale and lack this sense of ownership. A good example of this are apartment buildings with long, doubleloaded corridors. These are more suited to a short-stay hotel and do little to foster a permanent sense of home. The Mayor is committed to encouraging alternatives to these patterns of housing.
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Standards 3.1.1
All main entrances to houses, ground oor ats and communal entrance lobbies should be visible from the public realm and clearly identied12.
3.1.2
The distance from the accessible car parking space of requirement 3.3.4 to the home or to the relevant block entrance or lift core should be kept to a minimum and should be level or gently sloping [Lifetime Homes Criterion 2].
3.1.3
The approach to all entrances should preferably be level or gently sloping [Lifetime Homes Criterion 3].
3.1.4
All entrances should be illuminated and have level access over the threshold. Entrance doors should have 300mm of clear space to the pull side, and clear minimum opening widths of 800mm or 825mm depending on the direction and width of approach. Main entrances should have weather protection and a level external landing [Lifetime Homes Criterion 4].
In these smaller groups, residents tend to enjoy a greater sense of privacy, security and ownership and may be more likely to take an active interest in the upkeep of shared spaces. External circulation spaces shared by a limited number of people can also become places where residents can sit outside and socialise with neighbours. Management and maintenance is also easier with fewer users. The Design of Shared Circulation Shared circulation spaces need to be robust and convenient to use. Natural light, ventilation and views out are highly desirable, and the quality and durability of materials and xtures should be as high as possible, especially door entry systems, oor nishes and lighting. The principal access stairs in shared circulation cores should provide easy going stairs that have uniform risers not exceeding 170mm and uniform goings not less than 250mm with suitable handrails (see standard 3.2.8). Lifts, stairs and dwellings should be easy to nd and navigate by all users, including disabled and older people. Escape routes should be obvious from all areas of shared circulation and from every private dwelling entrance. Shared entrances should open into a lobby or hall large enough for people to manoeuvre with shopping and baby buggies, and for wheelchair users to move with ease. Lobbies in larger developments will be multi-functional spaces, often needing to accommodate post and deliveries, storage for cycles, buggies and/ or mobility scooters, as well as a concierge
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desk, where appropriate. A cleaners store or caretaker facility will often be required. Shared corridors and staircases should be efciently planned but wide enough for people to pass each other comfortably. This implies making all communal paths, corridors and decks a minimum width of 1200mm. A width of at least 1500mm is preferable, and is a particularly important consideration wherever user numbers are high, corridors are double-loaded or where wheelchair accessible dwellings are present. Access Controls All controls should be mounted at a height which is accessible to children and wheelchair users and keypads should include tactile numbers to help those with visual impairment. A shared circulation core serving four or more dwellings should provide intercom control in every dwelling linked to the main front door for electronic lock release. As numbers increase, unless a concierge is provided, additional security measures including audio-visual verication to the access control system should be included. Where a concierge service is provided, it is recognised that the number of dwellings served by a core may be safely increased, provided that the concierge is full time and the building has CCTV monitoring.
13. Recommendations for Living at Superdensity, Design for Homes 2007 14. Secured by Design, New Homes, Association of Chief Police Ofcers, 2010 15. Based on BS 8300
Standards 3.2.1
The number of dwellings accessed from a single core should not exceed eight per oor13.
3.2.2
An access core serving four or more dwellings should provide an access control system with entry phones in all dwellings linked to a main front door with electronic lock release14. Unless a 24 hour concierge is provided, additional security measures including audio-visual verication to the access control system should be provided where any of the following apply; more than 25 dwellings are served by one core the potential occupancy of the dwellings served by one core exceeds 100 bed spaces more than 8 dwellings are provided per oor.
Lift Provision Lifts make a range of daily tasks more manageable for everyone living in ats and are particularly important for older people and families with young children. They are essential for wheelchair users and other disabled people. Providing a lift and stairs at every core allows maximum choice and accessibility. As a rule, at least one lift per core should be provided in all blocks of ats where any dwellings are entered on or above the fourth oor (fth storey), measured from the main entrance level. Lift provision at the third oor (fourth storey) is desirable, as is the need to ensure that a signicant proportion of family dwellings in any development have access to a lift. Where lifts are provided and storage, car parking or other facilities are located at basement level, lift access should serve these areas. To provide cover in the event of breakdown, at least two lifts per core are required for any dwellings on or above the seventh oor (eighth storey) measured from the main entrance level, irrespective of the number of dwellings served. These requirements respond to the fact that it is generally considered unacceptable for people to have to walk up more than three ights of stairs on a daily basis, and unacceptable to have to walk up more than six ights even on an occasional basis. All lifts must conform to Lifetime Homes Criterion 6 which requires a minimum internal car size of 1100mm x 1400mm (referred to as an eight-person lift) which can accommodate a wheelchair user with a companion. A lift of 2m by 1.4m (a 16
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3.2.3
Where dwellings are accessed via an internal corridor, the corridor should receive natural light and adequate ventilation.
3.2.4
The minimum width of all paths, corridors and decks for communal circulation is 1200mm. The preferred minimum width is 1500mm, and is considered particularly important where corridors are double loaded (serve dwellings on each side) and where wheelchair accessible dwellings are provided.
person lift) allows a wheelchair user to turn around inside the lift15. Landings on each oor need to provide a clear space of at least 1500mm x 1500mm square. Lifts designed for ten or more people (1300m x 1400mm and larger) facilitate the movement of bulky furniture, bicycles, stretchers and cofns. They are desirable in general, and a particularly important consideration for dwellings on or above the seventh oor. Where family housing is provided in blocks of ats without lifts, developers should bear in mind that residents are likely to want additional secure storage space on the ground oor adjacent to the access stair for prams and other items. Notwithstanding the desirability of lift access, and the fact that, in relative terms, the capital and maintenance costs of lifts are reducing all the time, they remain a major contributor to the service charges passed on to residents. A real tension therefore exists between the desire to restrict the number residents per core to a manageable level and the need to provide enough households to make lift service charges affordable. Designers and developers are asked to balance these issues carefully. In cores where a lift is not provided from the outset, it is good practice to ensure that the design provides the space and servicing to allow for a lift to be installed in the future, either inside or outside of the building, adjacent to the landings. It is acknowledged that exibility will be required in blocks with fewer than 15 dwellings where the cost of providing a lift would make viability unlikely, even in the future.
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Standards 3.2.5
For buildings with dwellings entered from communal circulation at the rst, second or third oor where lifts are not provided, space should be identied within or adjacent to the circulation cores for the future installation of a wheelchair accessible lift.
16. In the Lifetime Homes Criteria a stair providing easy access is dened as one having maximum risers of 170mm, minimum goings of 250mm and a minimum width of 900mm measured 450mm above the pitch line.
3.2.6
All dwellings entered at the fourth oor (fth storey) and above should be served by at least one wheelchair accessible lift, and it is desirable that dwellings entered at the third oor (fourth storey) are served by at least one such lift. All dwellings entered at the seventh oor (eighth storey) and above should be served by at least two lifts.
3.2.7
Every designated wheelchair accessible dwelling above the ground oor should be served by at least one wheelchairaccessible lift. It is desirable that every wheelchair-accessible dwelling is served by at least two such lifts.
3.2.8
Principal access stairs should provide easy access16 regardless of whether a lift is provided. Where homes are reached by a lift, it should be fully wheelchair accessible [Lifetime Homes Criterion 5].
17. BS 8300: 2009 denes a blue badge bay as a parking bay designated for the exclusive use of vehicles displaying an ofcial disabled person's parking badge (the blue badge)
Choosing how to accommodate parking on the dwelling plot, on-site, on the street, in a parking court, undercroft or underground car-park is a key decision that can have a major impact on the appearance and amenity of a development. Well designed on-street and undercroft parking should be considered in preference to surface parking, in order to provide the maximum of amenity space and private gardens at ground level. All forms of parking should be carefully integrated with the design of landscape and buildings, to reconcile residents desire for convenient access to parking with the desire for pleasant streets and open spaces that are not dominated by cars. Where on-plot parking is provided, spaces adjacent to the home should be capable of being widened to 3300mm to allow for wheelchair use, in accordance with Lifetime Homes. The amount of on-site car parking provided should conform to London Plan policy on maximum parking provision and should relate to the public transport accessibility (PTAL level) of the site. In areas of good public transport accessibility and/or in town centres the aim should be to provide less than one space per dwelling. Elsewhere parking provision is related to the number of bedrooms in a new home. The levels provided by the PTAL index are relatively general and the amount and type of on-site parking on a particular site should be agreed on an individual basis with the local borough, informed by an understanding of existing provision in the
area. Low on-site provision sometimes increases pressure on existing streets and can create resistance to development proposals. Where on-site parking is provided in communal bays, one parking space of 3300mm should be provided adjacent to each communal entrance or lift core, in accordance with Lifetime Homes Standard 1. Even where car-free developments are considered acceptable, developments should allow space for drop-off, emergency access, deliveries, maintenance, car clubs and meet the needs of disabled residents and visitors. In all developments providing dedicated wheelchair accessible dwellings, each of these dwellings should be allocated a designated wheelchair parking space in a convenient location. These parking bays need to be 1200mm wider than standard bays, so that a driver or passenger, either or both of whom may be disabled, can get in and out safely and easily. Extra length is also desirable to help with accessing luggage or a wheelchair in the car boot. Blue badge17 parking bays for blocks of ats should be located next to lift cores to minimise travel distances, and a drop-off point with level access should be provided close to all shared entrances. The parking management plan should include a mechanism to ensure that the supply of blue badge bays is regularly monitored and provision is reviewed against changing demand. On-street parking is the cheapest and most exible arrangement but without designation or permits, can only operate on a rst come, rst served basis. Surface parking at the level of 1.5 spaces/dwelling
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is only likely to be achievable to a density of around 50dph, 1.0 space/dwelling to 70dph and 0.5 space/dwelling to 150 dph18. At higher densities than this it is likely that undercroft or underground parking will be necessary unless car-stacking or remote arrangements are made. These forms of parking carry with them hefty management, security and affordability implications and should not be undertaken lightly. To promote the use of electric cars, electric charge points should be routinely included in new developments.
3.3.3
Careful consideration should be given to the siting and organisation of car parking within an overall design for open space so that car parking does not negatively affect the use and appearance of open spaces20.
18. Source: Llewelyn Davies 19. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Annex 4 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Table 6.1 20. Based on Building for Life criterion 12
3.3.4
Where car parking is within the dwelling plot, at least one car parking space should be capable of enlargement to a width of 3300mm. Where parking is provided in communal bays, at least one space with a width of 3300mm should be provided per block entrance or access core in addition to spaces designated for wheelchair user dwellings [Lifetime Homes Criterion 1].
Standards 3.3.1
All developments should conform to London Plan policy on car parking provision19. In areas of good public transport accessibility and/or town centres the aim should be to provide less than one space per dwelling. Elsewhere parking provision should be as follows: 4+ bedroom dwellings: 1.5 - 2 spaces per dwelling; 3 bedroom dwellings: 1 - 1.5 spaces per dwelling; 1 - 2 bedroom dwellings: less than 1 per dwelling.
3.3.2
Each designated wheelchair accessible dwelling should have a car parking space 2400mm wide with a clear access way to one side of 1200mm. Refer to appendix 3 for design standards for wheelchair accessible housing.
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21. Cycle Parking Standards, Transport for London, 2008 22. Cycle Parking Standards, Transport for London, 2008
In the past, far too little space has been provided for cycle storage in new developments. The Mayor wishes to increase the provision of secure, convenient and sheltered cycle storage for new homes in London, to encourage people to use bicycles for everyday journeys. Cycle storage, which may be outside or within the home, should be provided at the level of one space for every home with one or two bedrooms and two spaces for homes with three or more bedrooms. The requirement is the same for houses and ats. Floor-space of 750 x 2000mm is a suitable guideline area per bicycle, but vertical hanging and lockers will have different space requirements. The location, type and number of cycle storage spaces should be indicated and dimensioned on plans submitted for full planning approval. Cycle storage outside the home should be located in a convenient and easily accessible storeroom, private garden or secure common space close to the street. Wherever possible, large communal stores and out of the way locations and should be avoided, as they tend to be vulnerable to cycle theft. The preferred option for residents is usually an individual lockable compartment, close to home. Where cycle storage is provided within the dwelling, the space must be in addition to the minimum GIA, and located at entrance level, within, or adjacent to the circulation area, rather than within habitable rooms or on balconies. Developments should also provide cycle parking provision for visitors; secure hoops
or stands are usually the most convenient for short stay use. Cycle stands should be located away from main pedestrian desire lines to avoid creating obstruction.
Standards 3.4.1
All developments should provide dedicated storage space for cycles at the following levels21: 1 per 1 or 2 bedroom dwelling; or 2 per 3 or more bedroom dwelling
3.4.2
Individual or communal cycle storage outside the home should be secure, sheltered and adequately lit, with convenient access to the street22. Where cycle storage is provided within the home, it should be provided in addition to the minimum GIA and minimum storage and circulation space requirements. Cycle storage identied in habitable rooms or on balconies will not be considered acceptable.
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All refuse and recycling containers, communal bin enclosures and stores should be accessible to people of all ages and to wheelchair users, and located on a hard, level surface. All storage areas should be provided with facilities for washing and cleaning. In high-density developments, a caretaker service to help with waste management may be appropriate and compactors should be considered. Underground storage relies on the local authority having the right lifting equipment and requires mechanical ventilation. Automated waste collection systems also have special collection requirements and require careful design. The energy use of these systems should be weighed up against their potential benets. Many boroughs now collect food waste (cooked food and table scraps) and organic waste for composting (grass clippings and raw fruit and vegetable peelings). Composting organic waste on site is another important and often overlooked method of reducing waste which brings positive benets to residents. A central composting point is desirable in all new developments. To avoid confusion with collected food waste, a composting area should be separate from the refuse storage and connected to an amenity space. Post and Deliveries In dwellings at street level, mailboxes in individual front doors are preferable. For upper oor ats, mailboxes should usually be banked either on the external wall close to the entrance, to allow delivery from outside and collection from
23. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 4A.22 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.17
24. IMRG Consumer Delivery Survey, IMRG, 2010 25. Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide: WAS1, DCLG, 2009
inside the lobby, or within the lobby, monitored by the concierge, where present. Individual mailboxes should be secure, robust, large enough for A4+ sized envelopes and magazines, and accessible to people of all ages and wheelchair users. Freestanding banks of postboxes outside the entrance to a development should be avoided, as they are less secure and may encourage vandalism. Estimates suggest that internet shopping will account for half of all retail sales by 2020 and that half of these sales will require home deliveries24. This has design implications for access and delivery as well as a need to make secure arrangements for receipt and shortterm storage when people are not at home. Where a concierge is not present, lockable delivery boxes should be considered.
Standards 3.5.1
Communal refuse and recycling containers, communal bin enclosures and refuse stores should be accessible to all residents including children and wheelchair users, and located on a hard, level surface. The location should satisfy local requirements for waste collection and should achieve full credits under the Code for Sustainable Homes, in accordance with the Technical Guide25. Refuse stores within buildings should be located to limit the nuisance caused by noise and smells and provided with means for cleaning.
3.5.2
Storage facilities for waste and recycling containers should be provided in accordance with the Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide and local authority requirements.
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No amount of sensitive design can compensate for houses and ats that are too small. The new minimum space standards at the heart of this guidance will improve residents quality of life and ensure that our homes are accessible and able to accommodate changing personal circumstances and growing families. Extra space will enable homes to be more than mere dormitories, encouraging sociable rooms within homes, and giving
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individual family members private space when they need it. This section sets out essential minimum standards for the gross internal oor area (GIA) and private outdoor space of general needs housing, and it provides guidance on the size and layout of rooms and storage areas. This guidance aims to make more generous housing that can allow people to live a full life in the city.
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below the minimum GIA. The schedule in appendix 2 represents a reasonable provision to meet day-to-day needs. Additional rooms, including utility rooms, studies and en-suite bathrooms, are encouraged, but will require additional oor area above the minimum GIA to avoid compromising the space and functionality of other parts of the home. Space Standards and Occupancy The new mandatory minimum space standards are intended to ensure that all new homes in London are t for purpose and offer the potential to be occupied over time by households of all tenures. The minimum gross internal oor area (GIA) required for any given dwelling type relates to the following variables: the number of people for whom the home has been designed (equivalent to the number of bedspaces it provides typically 2-8) the number of bedrooms it provides (typically 1-5) the number of storeys it contains (typically 1-3) The minimum GIAs for the most commonly used dwelling types are set out in table 4.1.1. These areas allow for the minimum habitable room areas, the amount of circulation and storage space, and the number of bathrooms and WCs which are considered desirable for each dwelling type, based on its potential occupancy. In principle, the minimum amount of space needed per person is not felt to vary by tenure, though it is accepted that levels of occupancy do tend to be tenure related.
In practice, homes for affordable rent are more likely to be fully occupied than those which are owner occupied. However, to ensure that all future homes will be comfortable when occupied to their full potential under any tenure, four simple principles apply: each home for two or more people should contain at least one double/twin bedroom each single bedroom should provide one adequate bed space (a oor area of 8 sq m is considered the desirable minimum) each double/twin room should provide two adequate bedspaces (a oor area of 12 sq m is considered the desirable minimum) all bed spaces should be counted when declaring the potential occupancy level of the dwelling Choice, exibility and market preferences are actively encouraged by the following: 1 bedroom homes are considered suitable for 1-2 people 2 bedroom homes are considered suitable for 3-4 people 3 bedroom homes are considered suitable for 4-6 people 4 bedroom homes are considered suitable for 5-8 people 5 bedroom homes are considered suitable for 6-10 people Notwithstanding the exibility facilitated by this broad mix, London has seen too many new homes built at, or even below, the lower end of each range of potential occupancy. Many new one bedroom homes only provide enough space for one person and many of those with three bedrooms can only be considered
suitable for full time occupancy by two or three people. This is particularly evident in the private sector, where, for example, relatively few three bedroom ats achieve a GIA of 86 sq m the minimum considered adequate for a family of ve. To ensure that shortfalls are addressed, choice is widened and local demand is reasonably met, individual boroughs will be encouraged to dene the mix of dwellings required for a proposed development and to do so by occupancy, rather than by the number of bedrooms. So for example, where there is high demand for ve person homes, this will mean that some ats with three bedrooms will be required to have a GIA of at least 86 sq m. Some smaller three bed ats, with a GIA between 74 sq m and 86 sq m, are likely to be acceptable in principle (subject to providing a good distribution of internal space, including enough storage) as good homes for four people of any tenure. In line with other recommendations in this chapter, local planners may also seek to restrict or encourage specic dwelling types, for example it may be desirable to restrict 2b4p, 3b6p and 4b8p dwelling types, particularly in affordable housing, because these types prevent any child from having a bedroom to themselves when the dwelling is fully occupied. The draft Housing SPG provides the exibility for developers to propose a proportion of single person dwellings of less than 50 sq m in central areas, where there is very good public transport accessibility (PTAL) and access to local services and amenities, subject to
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local authority quotas and restrictions on dwelling numbers. Based on the space standards study (appendix 1), the recommended minimum area of a one person, one bedroom dwelling is 37 sq m where the dwelling has a shower room, and 39 sq m where the dwelling has a bathroom. Single person dwellings will be required to meet the Lifetime Homes standards. Great care needs to be taken to prevent high concentrations of this type of dwelling. Single person dwellings should never be allowed to become a dominant part of the mix within a local urban context. Reviewing Designs at Planning Application Stage At planning application stage, developers are encouraged provide the following information for each dwelling or dwelling type: Dwelling plans not smaller than 1:100 scale with metric room dimensions showing the position of furniture and activity zones scheduled in appendix 2 and spaces allocated for a washing machine, for drying clothes, and for storing waste and recycling bins within the home (see section 4.7). the maximum potential occupancy the GIA the combined area of the kitchen, dining space and living space the area of each bedroom the area of dedicated built-in storage free of services and appliances and at least 2m high internally the area and dimensions of private outdoor space
Standards 4.1.1
All developments should meet the following minimum space standards.
Dwelling type (bedroom/ persons) Single storey dwelling 1b2p 2b3p 2b4p 3b4p 3b5p 3b6p 4b5p 4b6p 2b4p 3b4p 3b5p 4b5p 4b6p 3b5p 4b5p 4b6p Essential GIA (sq.m) 50 61 70 74 86 95 90 99 83 87 96 100 107 102 106 113
For dwellings designed for more than 6 people, at least 10 sq m gross internal area should be added for each additional person.
4.1.2
Dwelling plans should demonstrate that dwellings accommodate the furniture, access and activity space requirements relating to the declared level of occupancy. Refer to appendix 3 for design standards for wheelchair accessible housing.
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People do not always want, nor are they always able, to move home as their circumstances change. Every home should be exible enough to accommodate a range of possible changes in circumstances. This is one of the key principles of the new mimimum space standards and the Lifetime Homes standards. Flexibility in housing is the basis of the longevity of the best parts of our city. Flexibility is the potential for rooms in a home to be used in a variety of ways without altering the building fabric. In practice, this means making individual rooms large enough to accommodate different types and arrangements of furniture, carefully considering the location of doors, windows and built-in furniture, and building in the potential for spaces to be linked or separated without moving walls or changing the position of openings. At planning application stage, designers are encouraged to indicate on the submitted plans how dwelling types facilitate exible use. This can be achieved by showing that alternative seating arrangements can be accommodated in the main living space, or that double bedrooms can accommodate double or twin beds. Homes in which living, dining and kitchen functions are combined in a single space make it difcult for family members to pursue different activities at the same time without disturbing each other (see section 4.4). Even very large rooms will not be exible when there is an insufcient area of external wall with windows to allow for sub-division.
Adaptable homes go further by offering the potential for internal spaces to be modied with relative ease. Thoughtful design can facilitate adaptation by positioning structural supports to allow new openings in internal walls, or by creating easily demountable partitions which are clear of services27.
Standards 4.2.1
Dwelling plans should demonstrate that dwelling types provide exibility by allowing for an alternative seating arrangement in living rooms and by accommodating double or twin beds in at least one double bedroom.
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be identied in timber joisted oors. This should be clear of services and with a potential approach from one of the shorter sides. In certain circumstances, provision for a future stair lift alone may satisfy the standard.
Standards 4.3.1
The minimum width of hallways and other circulation spaces inside the home should be 900mm. This may reduce to 750mm at pinch points e.g. next to radiators, where doorway widths meet the following specication:
Minimum clear opening width of doorway (mm) 750 775 900 Minimum approach width when approach is not head on (mm) 1200 1050 900
28. In the Lifetime Homes Criteria the entrance level of a dwelling is generally considered to be the storey containing the main entrance door. Where there are no rooms on the storey containing the main entrance door (e.g. in some types of maisonettes, townhouses and flats over garages or shops), the first storey level containing a habitable or non-habitable room can be considered the entrance level, if this storey is reached by an easy going stair. An easy going stair has risers of 170mm or less, goings of at least 250mm and a minimum width of 900mm measured 450mm above the pitch line.
Where a hallway is at least 900mm wide and the approach to the door is headon, a minimum clear opening door width of 750mm should be provided [Lifetime Homes Criterion 6].
4.3.2
The design of dwellings of more than one storey should incorporate potential for a stair lift to be installed and a suitable identied space for a throughthe-oor lift from the entrance level28 to a storey containing a main bedroom and an accessible bathroom [Lifetime Homes Criterion 12].
The combined area of the living room, dining room and kitchen is an important measure of the quality of space within a home. The minimum combined living areas in this guide allow the designer the freedom to organise and combine these spaces in different ways while safeguarding the overall living space within a dwelling. An open-plan layout of living, dining and kitchen spaces is often considered to be the market preference, but there are times when it is preferable to achieve a degree of separation, at least between the living space and the work area of the kitchen. Homes for larger families must cater for activities involving any number of members of the family, with or without guests. Dwellings with three or more bedrooms should have two social spaces, for example a living room and a kitchen-dining room both with external windows. Where housing is being designed for specic cultural needs, designers might nd a preference for the kitchen to be separated from the living and dining spaces. Different methods of cooking may demand larger kitchens with better ventilation29. Narrow living rooms are not usually useful, enjoyable or exible. To allow sufcient space for circulation around furniture, and allow people to sit or play as a group, the guide recommends that the width of the principal sitting space is at least 3.2m for dwellings with four or more occupants, and at least 2.8m in dwellings for those with fewer than four occupants.
There should be space to turn a wheelchair in dining areas and living rooms and there should be basic circulation space for wheelchair users elsewhere. The provision of a 1500mm turning circle or 1400 x 1700mm ellipse in living and dining areas connected by a wheelchair accessible route to the front door will satisfy this standard. A living room, living space or kitchendining room should be at entrance level28, to provide accessible social space for visitors unable to use stairs. To allow people to see out of living room windows while seated, the base of principal window glazing should be a maximum of 800mm 850mm above the oor.
Standards 4.4.1
The following combined oor areas for living, kitchen and dining space should be met:
Designed occupancy 2 person 3 person 4 person 5 person 6 person Minimum combined oor area of living, dining and kitchen spaces (sq m) 23 25 27 29 31
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Living/Dining/Kitchen continued
4.4.2
The minimum width of the main sitting area should be 2.8m in 2-3 person dwellings and 3.2m in dwellings designed for four or more people.
4.4.6
Windows in the principal living space should start 800mm above nished oor level (+/- 50mm) to allow people to see out while seated. At least one opening window should be easy to approach and operate by people with restricted movement and reach. [Lifetime Homes Criterion 15].
4.4.3
Dwellings with three or more bedrooms should have two living spaces, for example a living room and a kitchendining room. Both rooms should have external windows. If a kitchen is adjacent to the living room, the internal partition between the rooms should not be load-bearing, to allow for reconguration as an open plan arrangement. Studies will not be considered as second living spaces.
28. In the Lifetime Homes Criteria the entrance level of a dwelling is generally considered to be the storey containing the main entrance door. Where there are no rooms on the storey containing the main entrance door (e.g. in some types of maisonettes, townhouses and ats over garages or shops), the rst storey level containing a habitable or non-habitable room can be considered the entrance level, if this storey is reached by an easy going stair. An easy going stair has risers of 170mm or less, goings of at least 250mm and a minimum width of 900mm measured 450mm above the pitch line.
4.4.4
There should be space for turning a wheelchair in dining areas and living rooms and basic circulation space for wheelchairs elsewhere [Lifetime Homes Criterion 7].
4.4.5
A living room, living space or kitchendining room should be at entrance level28 (Lifetime Homes Standard 8).
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4.5 Bedrooms
People often use bedrooms for work and study, or to relax away from the social spaces of the home. Children and young people need space in bedrooms for homework, play and hobbies, storing their belongings, entertaining friends, and spending time alone. The preferred standards for the minimum oor areas of bedrooms are 8 sq m for single bedrooms and 12 sq m for double and twin bedrooms. These minimum areas have been established by considering the activity and furniture requirements of the Homes and Communities Agencys legacy HQI standards, set out in appendix 2, and the Lifetime Homes requirement for basic circulation space for wheelchair users within bedrooms. Double and twin bedrooms have the same recommended minimum oor area to encourage designers to design rooms suitable for adults or children, with one double bed or two single beds. It will be important that the location of the door, window and any built-in furniture allows for this. Double and twin bedrooms should have a minimum width of 2.75m to allow sufcient space for a wheelchair user to pass the foot of the bed when the head is placed against the side wall. In homes of two or more storeys there should be a convenient bed space at the entrance level28 to help with a temporary change in circumstances (such as a household member recovering from a hip operation or a broken leg).
Dwellings should allow a convenient wheelchair route from a main bedroom to the bathroom and for the ceiling above the main bedroom and the bathroom to be capable of supporting a hoist.
Standards 4.5.1
The minimum area of a single bedroom should be 8 sq m. The minimum area of a double or twin bedroom should be 12 sq m.
4.5.2
The minimum width of double and twin bedrooms should be 2.75m in most of the length of the room.
4.5.3
In homes of two or more storeys with no permanent bedroom at entrance level28, there should be space on the entrance level that could be used as a convenient temporary bed space [Lifetime Homes Criterion 9].
4.5.4
Structure above a main bedroom and an accessible bathroom should be capable of supporting a ceiling hoist and the design should allow for a reasonable route between this bedroom and bathroom [Lifetime Homes Criterion 13].
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350mm from the centre-line of the WC on one side and at least 1000mm from the centre-line of the WC on the other side. This zone should extend in front of the WC by at least 1100mm and should extend back at least 500mm from the front edge of the WC for a width of 1000mm from the centre-line. A washbasin may be located either on the side wall or adjacent to the cistern, and should not project into the approach zone by more than 200mm. A clear 1100mm deep zone should be provided in front of any obstruction under the washbasin. Unless provided elsewhere on the entrance level, oor drainage for an accessible shower should be provided in the WC with either shallow falls in the oor to effect drainage, or a oor that allows for the easy installation of a laidto-fall oor surface in the future. A clear oor area for showering of 1000mm x 1000mm should be provided. To satisfy Lifetime Homes Criterion 14 in relation to accessible bathrooms, the following two additional points should be incorporated in addition to the ve points above: A clear oor area for showering of 1000mm x 1000mm should be provided if a showering area is provided in addition to a bath. Where an accessible shower is provided from the outset with no bath, a clear 1500mm manoeuvring circle, or a clear 1400mm x 1700mm ellipse should be provided at oor level, overlapping with the showering zone.
28. In the Lifetime Homes Criteria the entrance level of a dwelling is generally considered to be the storey containing the main entrance door. Where there are no rooms on the storey containing the main entrance door (e.g. in some types of maisonettes, townhouses and ats over garages or shops), the rst storey level containing a habitable or non-habitable room can be considered the entrance level, if this storey is reached by an easy going stair. An easy going stair has risers of 170mm or less, goings of at least 250mm and a minimum width of 900mm measured 450mm above the pitch line.
30. Housing Quality Indicators Version 4, (former) Housing Corporation, 2007 31. Dwellings over more than one storey with no more than two bedrooms may instead be designed with a Part M compliant WC at entrance level. The WC should provide a floor drain to allow for an accessible shower to be installed at a later date. 32. Adequate support for grab rails should be available at any location on all walls within a height band of 300mm - 1800mm from the floor.
The diagrams in appendix 1 provide examples of bathrooms meeting the accessibility standards of Lifetime Homes.
Standards 4.6.1
Dwellings designed for an occupancy of ve or more people should provide a minimum of one bathroom with WC and one additional WC30.
4.6.2
Where there is no accessible bathroom at entrance level28, a wheelchair accessible WC with potential for a shower to be installed should be provided at entrance level31 [Lifetime Homes Criterion 10].
4.6.3
An accessible bathroom should be provided in every dwelling on the same storey as a main bedroom [Lifetime Homes Criterion 14].
4.6.4
Walls in bathrooms and WCs should be capable of taking adaptations such as handrails32 [Lifetime Homes Criterion 11].
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People also need suitable spaces outside habitable rooms for waste and recycling bins, washing machines and for drying clothes. The Code for Sustainable Homes recommends that recycling bins are located in a dedicated non-obstructive position in a kitchen cupboard, in a utility room next to the kitchen or in a connected garage. Space for a washing machine is included in the furniture schedule for the kitchen but may be located in another suitable area such as the bathroom, or a utility room or laundry cupboard. Drying clothes takes up space and gives off moisture which can contribute to condensation, so the internal space identied for clothes drying should not be within habitable rooms or the kitchen and should preferably be well ventilated and heated. A dedicated utility room with space and services for a boiler, washing machine (and preferably heating and ventilation for drying clothes) will always be desirable in any size of home, and in family dwellings designed for ve or more people, providing a utility room is recommended.
33. Housing Space Standards, HATC Report for the Mayor of London, 2006
Standards 4.7.1
Built-in general internal storage space free of hot water cylinders and other obstructions, with a minimum internal height of 2m and a minimum area of 1.5 sq m should be provided for 2 person dwellings, in addition to storage provided by furniture in habitable rooms. For each additional occupant an additional 0.5 sq m of storage space is required.
Work and study are a regular part of home life for many people, across all age groups. Flexible working patterns and wider access to the internet are making it possible for more people to work from home. Credits are awarded under the Code for Sustainable Homes for providing space and services that enable a room to be used effectively as a home ofce. Sufcient space is dened as the minimum area to allow a desk, chair and ling cabinet or bookshelf to be installed, with space to move around the furniture. A suitable room may be the living room (in dwellings with 1-2 bedrooms), one of the bedrooms or a large hall or dining area, where sufcient space, natural light and services are provided. When homes are not fully occupied, people may choose to convert bedrooms into studies or home ofces. In all rooms of the home, switches, sockets and other service controls should be positioned within an accessible height band of 450mm to 1200mm from the oor and at least 300mm away from any internal room corner.
4.8.2
Service controls should be within a height band of 450mm to 1200mm from the oor and at least 300mm away from any internal room corner [Lifetime Homes Criterion 16].
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plans for designated wheelchair accessible dwellings submitted with a planning application should demonstrate that the dwellings can be easily and conveniently occupied by a wheelchair user. The key requirements for wheelchair user dwellings are set out in the GLAs Best Practice Guide on Wheelchair Accessible Housing35, which is summarised in Appendix 3.
35. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 3A.5 and Best Practice Guidance on Wheelchair Accessible Housing, GLA, 2007 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 3.8
Standards 4.9.1
Ten percent of new housing should be designed to be wheelchair accessible or easily adaptable for residents who are wheelchair users in accordance with the GLA Best Practice Guidance, Wheelchair Accessible Housing. Refer to appendix 3 for design standards for wheelchair accessible housing.
Private open space is desirable in all circumstances and, in general, the more private open space provided per home, the better. This guide requires that all dwellings should be provided with adequate private open space in the form of a garden, terrace, balcony or glazed wintergarden. Private open space standards have been established in the same way as internal space standards, by considering the space required for furniture, access and activities and in relation to the number of occupants. A minimum of 5 sq m of private outdoor space is required for all 2 person dwellings and an extra 1 sq m should be provided for each additional occupant. The required minimum width and minimum depth for all balconies and other private external spaces is 1500mm. These minimum areas and dimensions provide sufcient space for either a meal around a small table, clothes drying, or for a family to sit outside with visitors. Enclosing balconies as glazed, ventilated winter gardens is a good option in many circumstances and is recommended for all dwellings exposed to NEC noise category C or D36, or strong wind, particularly at high level. Winter gardens should be thermally separated from the interior and the oor should be drained. In exceptional circumstances, where site conditions make it impossible to provide private open space for all dwellings, up to 5% of dwellings in a development may instead be provided with additional internal living space equivalent to the private open space requirement, added to the minimum GIA and the minimum combined living area of the dwelling.
Under the Lifetime Homes standards, private open spaces should have level access from the home with an upstand not exceeding 15mm and a level, weather-tight threshold. Exemptions will be considered for inset balconies and roof terraces where a step up is necessary to accommodate thermal insulation to the accommodation below. Balconies should be designed to provide some shelter and privacy from neighbouring properties. This can be achieved using screens or by setting the balcony back within the facade. Balconies should have solid oors draining to a downpipe. Where balconies overlook noise sources, solid parapets and absorbent soft materials should be considered for their acoustic benets. Where possible, rear gardens should have separate direct access so that bicycles and garden equipment may be taken into the garden without passing through the home. Private outdoor spaces will be used for drying clothes, and the area schedule in appendix 2 allows space for 4m of drying line for 1-2 bedroom dwellings and 6m for 3+ bedroom dwellings, which could be in the form of a clothes rack, rotary dryer or drying line. Secured by Design principles should be incorporated in the design of all private outdoor spaces. For example, fences and balconies (as well as communal bins and cycle stores) should be designed so as not to provide climbing aids to gain access into a property 37.
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Standards 4.10.1
A minimum of 5 sq m of private outdoor space should be provided for 1-2 person dwellings and an extra 1 sq m should be provided for each additional occupant38.
4.10.2
Private outdoor spaces should have level access from the home39 [Lifetime Homes Criterion 4].
4.10.3
The minimum depth and width of all balconies and other private external spaces is 1500mm40.
38. Based on the furniture, access and activity requirements of the HCA legacy Housing Quality Indicators Version 4, 2007, and drying space and private open space requirements of the Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, 2009, ENE4 and HEA3 39. Balconies and terraces over habitable rooms which require a step up to increase slab thickness for insulation are exempt from the Lifetime Homes level access standard. 40. Based on the Quality Standards: Delivering Quality Places, (former) English Partnerships, 2007, the furniture, access and activity requirements of the HCA legacy Housing Quality Indicators Version 4, 2007, and drying space and private open space requirements of the Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, 2009
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Surrounded by the noise and activity of daily life in London, it can be difcult to make homes that offer people a place to withdraw and retreat from the city. Even in the suburbs, trafc noise and adjacent uses can be hostile to the quiet repose we want from our homes.
To address this, the guidance in this section proposes standards around privacy and noise mitigation, but also recognises the importance of generous ceiling heights and natural light to the sense of wellbeing we take from our homes. We are determined to encourage the kind of housing that provides comfortable and enjoyable places of retreat and privacy.
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5.1 Privacy
Standards 5.1.1
Design proposals should demonstrate how habitable rooms within each dwelling are provided with an adequate level of privacy in relation to neighbouring property and the street and other public spaces.
Homes in the city should provide the opportunity to look out on and enjoy surrounding public and shared open spaces. At the same time, the home should be a comfortable, private setting for family and individual pursuits, social interaction and relaxation. Private outdoor space should also offer these qualities. People value highly the opportunity to relax outdoors without being seen by neighbours or passersby. In the past, planning guidance for privacy has been concerned with achieving visual separation between dwellings by setting a minimum distance of 18-21m between facing homes. These are still useful yardsticks for visual privacy, but adhering rigidly to these measures can limit the variety of urban spaces and housing types in the city, and can sometimes unnecessarily restrict density. Instead, designers are required to demonstrate how the design as a whole uses a variety of measures to provide adequate visual and acoustic privacy for every home. Designers should consider the position and aspect of habitable rooms, gardens and balconies, and avoid windows that directly face each other where privacy distances are tight. It will often be benecial to provide a set-back or buffer where habitable rooms directly face a public thoroughfare, street, lane or access deck.
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41. Planning Policy Guidance 24: Planning and Noise, DCLG, 1994
A home with opening windows on at least two sides has many inherent benets, including better daylight, a greater chance of direct sunlight for longer periods, cross ventilation, a choice of views, access to a quiet side of the building, and a greater exibility in the use of rooms. The Mayor believes dual aspect should be the rst option that designers explore for all new developments. A dual aspect dwelling is one with opening windows on two external walls, which may be on opposite sides of the building or around a corner. One aspect may be towards an external access deck or courtyard, although the layout of the dwelling needs to be carefully considered in these cases to maintain privacy. Where limited rooms are required, the frontage is generous, the plan is shallow, and the orientation is favourable, good single aspect one- and two- bedroom homes are possible. In single aspect dwellings with more than two bedrooms, it is difcult to achieve adequate ventilation and daylight to all rooms in an efcient plan layout which avoids long internal corridors. Even where this is possible, the outlook will lack variety and many ancillary spaces will be internal.
5.2.2
Where single aspect dwellings are proposed, the designer should demonstrate how good levels of ventilation, daylight and privacy will be provided to each habitable room and the kitchen.
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5.3 Noise
Noise from adjoining properties, from the street and from common areas of the building can be a common cause of stress, sleep disturbance and friction between neighbours. Research suggests that peoples perception of privacy in the home is affected by noise as much as by visual privacy42. The aim should be to exceed the minimum standards set out in Building Regulations Part E in line with the target levels of the Code for Sustainable Homes. The layout and placement of rooms within the building should be considered at an early stage in the design process to limit the impact of external noise on bedrooms and living rooms. The impact of noise should also be considered in the placement of private external spaces. The following are general considerations for good practice: Limiting noise from external sources including road, rail and air trafc, and noise-generating public and business uses, by orientating sound-sensitive rooms to face quieter external spaces. Designing larger developments to create quieter external spaces between dwellings. Planning building and dwelling layouts to limit the transmission of airborne and impact sound from common areas, lifts and refuse chutes. Planning dwelling layouts to limit noise transmission between adjacent dwellings by arranging bedrooms of adjacent dwellings next to, and above, one another, rather than living rooms above bedrooms. Taking measures to limit reverberation within internal common circulation areas. Limiting sound transfer within the
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individual dwelling by ensuring that walls between bedrooms and the living room and WCs provide adequate resistance to the passage of sound. Further advice is given in the London Plan SPG on Sustainable Design and Construction43. Designers are encouraged to make use of Robust Details as a design tool whether or not they are used to satisfy Building Regulations44.
42. Perceptions of Privacy and Density in Housing, Design for Homes, 2003 43. London Plan, GLA, 2008, SPG on Sustainable Design and Construction, section 2.4.2 44. See www.robustdetails.com
Standards 5.3.1
The layout of adjacent dwellings and the location of lifts and circulation spaces should seek to limit the transmission of noise to sound sensitive rooms within dwellings.
Standards 5.4.1
The minimum oor to ceiling height in habitable rooms is 2.5m between nished oor level and nished ceiling level. A minimum oor to ceiling height of 2.6m in habitable rooms is considered desirable and taller ceiling heights are encouraged in ground oor dwellings.
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room for part of the day. Sunlight is especially desirable in living areas and kitchen dining spaces as these are the rooms most likely to be used for long periods. The needs of people who spend a large proportion of their day indoors, including older people, demand particular consideration. Sunlight can have a signicant impact on thermal comfort and energy consumption. In winter it can make an important contribution to heating, but excessive solar gain can cause discomfort in summer. In general the best control of sunlight is achieved through the careful positioning and sizing of windows according to the function of spaces and their orientation. Fixed projections above windows, including balconies, can be designed to screen high summer sun while admitting low winter sun and deciduous trees also provide useful seasonal shading.
Standards 5.5.1
Glazing to all habitable rooms should be not less than 20% of the internal oor area of the room.
5.5.2
All homes must provide for direct sunlight to enter at least one habitable room for part of the day. Living areas and kitchen dining spaces should preferably receive direct sunlight.
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homes that are comfortable in hot summer months and well insulated for the winter. This section highlights the requirements of the London Plan, which are linked to Code for Sustainable Homes guidance and national targets for achieving zero net carbon emissions in all new housing by 2016.
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Standards 6.1.1
Designers should seek to achieve a minimum of Level 4 of the Code for Sustainable Homes in all new developments.
6.1.2
All homes should satisfy London Plan policy on sustainable design and construction and make the fullest contribution to the mitigation of and adaptation to climate change.
46. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 4A.1/ DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.2 47. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 4A.6/ DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.6 48. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 4A.7/ DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.7 49. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 4A.16 and Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, DCLG, 2009, WAT1 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.15
The Mayor has set targets, over and above national ones, for reducing carbon emissions and generating energy in London. By 2025 the Mayor seeks to achieve a reduction in Londons overall carbon dioxide emissions of 60 per cent below 1990 levels and expects 25 per cent of heat and power used in London to be generated in local, decentralised energy plants. Meeting Code level 4 requires a 44 per cent improvement in energy efciency beyond Building Regulations Part L 2006. The code does not prescribe how to achieve this target, but the London Plan requires that all developments adopt the following hierarchy of priorities for providing energy for heating, lighting, and cooling the home46: Lean: using less energy in construction and operation by incorporating sustainable design and construction measures, and by specifying energyefcient lighting and appliances; Clean: supplying energy efciently by prioritising decentralised energy generation47; and Green: using renewable energy Lean: Using Less Energy Before decentralised or renewable energy technologies are considered, the rst priority is to reduce energy consumption. This means making the building fabric more efcient to minimise energy loss, taking steps to reduce the need for electric lighting, heating, mechanical ventilation and cooling and the specifying energy efcient lighting and appliances. Key design considerations include: Maximising the controlled use of
passive solar energy in the layout and orientation of buildings and design of windows; Maximising the use of passive ventilation; Using energy-efcient window glazing and frames; Increasing air tightness in the building envelope; Making appropriate use of thermal mass and insulation; and Installing energy-efcient lighting and appliances.
Clean: Supplying Energy Efciently The Mayors second priority is supplying energy more efciently through decentralised energy generation, through small energy sources generating electricity and heat near the point of use. The London Plan expects all major new developments to connect into existing heating and cooling networks, or provide site-wide CHP (Combined Heat and Power) networks where feasible, unless sitespecic solutions combining low carbon or renewable energy generation achieve a greater reduction in CO2 emissions48. Green: Using Renewable Energy Where feasible, development proposals should incorporate on-site renewable energy generation to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. Renewable energy generation methods include solar thermal systems, biomass-fuelled heating and/or power, ground source heating and cooling, air source heat pumps, photovoltaics, wind power, and renewable energy from waste49.
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Standards 6.2.1
Development proposals should be designed in accordance with the London Plan energy hierarchy, and should meet the following minimum targets for carbon dioxide emissions reduction.
Year 2010 - 2013 2013 - 2016 2016 - 2031 Improvement on 2006 Building Regulations 44 per cent 55 per cent Zero carbon
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6.3 Overheating
Standards 6.3.1
Development proposals should demonstrate how the design of dwellings will avoid overheating during summer months without reliance on energy intensive mechanical cooling systems.
Overheating is an increasing concern for homes in London. It is predicted that temperatures will rise due to climate change and London is likely to be warmer than surrounding areas due to the urban heat island effect, caused by waste heat generated by energy use and retained by the materials in the urban environment. As homes are made more airtight and energy efcient, care must be taken to limit the risk of overheating. In accordance with the London Plan Sustainable Design and Construction SPG this guide promotes dual aspect dwellings, which help to make natural ventilation more effective in hot weather (see section 5.2). Designers should also consider controlling solar gain in summer by using xed or adjustable shading devices and planting deciduous trees to achieve shading in the summer.
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6.4 Water
Water Use Demand for water is rising as Londons population grows, and the hotter, drier summers predicted as a result of climate change are likely to increase demand further and reduce availability. Less predictable rainfall patterns will also make it more difcult to retain the water that does fall. To achieve Code Level 4, water ttings and appliances should consume no more than 105 litres per person per day. Flood Risk and Managing Surface Water Run-Off London is prone to ooding from ve sources: tidal, uvial, surface water, sewer and groundwater ooding. Climate change is likely to increase the likelihood of ooding from the rst four sources. Flood risk can be reduced by locating new developments in appropriate places, through design and construction, and by managing surface water run-off. The governments PPS25 and the Code for Sustainable Homes aim to encourage housing development in low ood risk areas and to take measures to reduce the impact of ooding on houses built in medium or high risk areas. Under the London Plan, ood risk should be assessed in accordance with PPS25. Where development in areas at risk from ooding is permitted, management and mitigation measures should be implemented. Managing surface water run-off from new developments is a mandatory requirement of the Code for Sustainable Homes. London Plan policies on sustainable
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drainage set out the expectations for developers to manage ood risk. Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems (SUDS) techniques include permeable paving, soakaways, storm water retention, green roofs, soft landscaping, holding ponds, swales and reed beds. Green roofs should be incorporated within developments wherever possible. Green roofs contribute to biodiversity, reduce heat loss from buildings and help to mitigate the urban heat island effect. Green roofs can also be designed to provide amenity space.
Standards 6.4.1
New dwellings should be designed to ensure that a maximum of 105 litres of water is consumed per person per day49.
49. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 4A.16 and Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, DCLG, 2009, WAT1 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.15 50. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policies 4A.12 and 4A.13 and Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, DCLG, 2009, SUR2 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.12 51. Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, DCLG, 2009, SUR1 52. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policies 4A.11 and 4A.14 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 5.10 & 5.13
6.4.2
Where development is permitted in an area at risk of ooding, it should incorporate ood resilient design in accordance with PPS2550.
6.4.3
New development should adhere to standards for surface water run-off as set out in the Code for Sustainable Homes51.
6.4.4
New development should incorporate Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems and green roofs where appropriate52.
6.5 Materials
Standards 6.5.1
All new residential development should meet the requirements of the Code Level 4 with regard to using materials with lower environmental impacts over their lifecycle55.
53. The Green Guide to Specication, www. thegreenguide.org.uk 54. London Plan SPG on Sustainable Design and Construction, GLA, 2006, section 2.3.3 55. Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, DCLG, 2009, MAT1 56. Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, DCLG, 2009, MAT2 and MAT3 and London Plan SPG on Sustainable Design and Construction, GLA, 2006
Embodied energy is becoming an increasing proportion of the overall lifetime construction and operational energy use of buildings. Efforts should be made to reduce the embodied energy of the construction process and materials used in construction. The Code for Sustainable Homes assesses the embodied environmental impact of construction products and materials used in the roofs, external and internal walls, ground and upper oors, and windows of buildings through the Green Guide ratings53. As a mandatory requirement of the Code, at least three of the ve aspects of the building envelope should achieve a Green Guide rating between A+ and D. A further nine credits are available for the responsible sourcing of materials. The London Plan Sustainable Design and Construction SPG54 also provides standards for the use of materials based upon the principles of: procuring and using materials sustainably; selecting materials with low lifecycle impacts; using local materials; and using an appropriate palette of materials. Re-used and recycled materials, or materials with a high recycled content, should also be used where possible as these can signicantly reduce the embodied energy in new development.
6.5.2
All new residential development should accord with Code for Sustainable Homes Level 4 and the London Sustainable Design and Construction SPG with regard to the sourcing of materials56.
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6.6 Ecology
Standards 6.6.1
The design and layout of new residential development should avoid areas of ecological value and seek to enhance the ecological capital of the area in accordance with GLA best practice guidance on biodiversity and nature conservation58.
The Code for Sustainable Homes says that development should avoid building on land of ecological value and wildlife habitat. Where possible, development should enhance the ecological value of a site. The code seeks to protect the natural environment during construction and promotes efcient building footprints. It is vital to make the best use of land to ensure that development does not adversely affect habitats and ecologies. London Plan policy regarding biodiversity and nature conservation promotes a proactive approach to the protection, promotion and management of biodiversity across the capital. The GLAs best practice guidance relating to Development Plan Policies for Biodiversity provides advice on the conservation and enhancement of the biodiversity and natural heritage of London57. Proposals for development should give full consideration to their direct and indirect effects on ecology.
57. London Plan Best Practice Guidance on Development Plan Policies for Biodiversity, GLA, 2005 58. London Plan, GLA, 2008, Policy 3D.14 and Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guide, DCLG, 2009, ECO1-4 / DRLP, GLA, 2010, Policy 7.19
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Excellence in design will not be achieved just by applying a set of design standards. The quality of the end result will depend on two other factors: the strength of the clients design management process and the quality of the project team. Great design requires great designers, and the section below on design team selection should be taken seriously. London needs a variety of design expertise to overcome the challenges outlined in this guidance.
This section suggests a model process for design management (that can be used with any procurement method) and proposes a series of principles for design team selection and post-construction management. These recommendations are based on the Design Management Process set out in Standards and Quality in Development: A Good Practice Guide, 2008, by HATC Ltd for the National Housing Federation. This is recommended as a source of further information. Additional references are provided at the end of the chapter.
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Prepare Planning Report. Identify stakeholders including end user representatives. Appoint Designer and Design Champion.
Scheme Context & Site Appraisal. Prepare the Initial Brief. Desk-top estimate of Site Capacity.
Design Principles & Sketch Options. Prepare Project Design Brief, incorporating preferred Sketch Option.
Pre-application consultation
Repeated processes: Design Review, single design conversation, nancial viability assessment, end user consultation
Development of Concept Design. Review Concept Design against Project Design Brief.
Design Development towards full planning application. Feed in client content to planning application. Sign off and freeze Scheme Design.
Design
Refused Technical Design (RIBA Stage E) Retain original Design Team and Design Champion. Review Technical Design information against Project Design Brief. Review and sign off Stage E Report. Approved Appeal process
Construction
Project delivery
End user consultation and feedback review. Incorporate feedback in future project briefs. Six month review period to address any required changes.
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Use
may involve one or more design review meetings at which decision makers and stakeholders are present, so that design
concerns and potential conicts can be shared and discussed with the design team.
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4. Design Principles
Before sketch options are produced, the design team should be asked to propose a set of design principles for the development which the client should consider and amend or conrm as part of a draft project design brief. The design principles will be based on the clients site appraisal, initial brief, and the report on planning and other local authority policies. The design principles are likely to cover: Entry points to the site and points of connection to surrounding area; Treatment of the edge of the development in relation to its surroundings; Approach to energy efciency / Code for Sustainable Homes; Approach to landscape design and the provision of open spaces and play spaces; Retention or removal of existing features; The amount and location of car parking; The priorities for spending the resources available.
5. Sketch Options
The designer will then be able to produce sketch options in line with the initial brief and design principles for the client to cost. The preferred option, together with the project objectives and more specic information (such as targeted use, tenure and/or unit mixes) will then become the project design brief required by the design team at RIBA Stage B.
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Managing Design through the Work Stages Design principles agreed during the early design stages must not be lost after Stage D, during technical design or later. The client needs to decide, with its lead consultant, how control over the design is to be maintained through the later stages of design and construction. Different mechanisms may be appropriate depending upon the type of construction contract and who has responsibility for further developing the design the client, architect or building contractor. Any potential changes to the requirements should be analysed in terms of their impact on the programme, cost plan, quality, work of consultants, and planning. Contractor Procurement A construction procurement route should be selected that safeguards the projects original design intent throughout the implementation stage should be selected. A signicant element of design quality is won or lost after Stage D, and that quality is relatively easily lost unless the client continues to demand it. Clients can seek to minimise risks to design quality by using a traditional form of building contract and ensuring that the original design team is responsible for design development all the way through the RIBA Work Stages. Generally, when clients transfer nancial risk to contractors by using design and build contracts they expose themselves to the risk of a reduction in design quality. Where a design and build contract is used, a client may improve their control of design risk by providing the main contractor with detailed employers requirements and reserving the right to comment on design details, using the original design team as advisors. The quality may also be improved by selecting a contractor who is enthusiastic about design, not just building.
Another key principle is that design development should be completed before the contractor is appointed. In a Design and Build or Partnering process this means developing the design, including key architectural details, to RIBA Stage E. There should be a bias away from any form of procurement that limits design development prior to the appointment of the contractor. An independent design advisor should be appointed with a remit to monitor and safeguard design quality throughout the process. Forward Planning for Management and Maintenance All new developments that involve shared or communal areas must have robust management structures that deliver a secure, supportive and safe environment, and provide for management and maintenance activities including the cleaning of common parts, maintenance of lifts, upkeep of landscaping, management of parking and collection of service charges. Where the landlord is an RSL, a lettings and allocation plan is also required. A joint management plan, specifying how the freeholder or landlord(s) will manage and maintain the development and the structures for ongoing leaseholder or tenant consultation, should be drafted prior to planning stage and should preferably be formally agreed at least six months prior to Practical Completion. This plan should: State the means of communication between the freeholder or landlord management company and leaseholders or tenants, and how leaseholders and tenants will be informed of their rights and obligations under the agreement. Demonstrate that satisfactory levels of security can be achieved and include measures to address antisocial behaviour, where relevant. State how the parking allocation, including blue badge bays, will be managed.
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Set out the anticipated initial ground rent and service charges, and the process by which these will be changed in the future. Set out objectives and standards specifying the quality of maintenance works and the method of response to reports of failure (e.g.lift breakdown), as well as the frequency and scope of cyclical works. Specify how maintenance works will be funded, and any charges the freeholder or landlord management company may make for procurement and management of these works. Provide a schedule of the amenities to which residents will have access, detailing any service charges relating to the amenities and how these will be decided in future. Describe the forum and process for leaseholders and/or tenants to discuss management and maintenance with the landlord, and agree changes in procedures and obligations. References Standards and Quality in Development: A good practice guide, (second edition) HATC, National Housing Federation, ISBN 978 0 86297 539 5, 2008 Capital Gains: Making high density housing work in London, London Housing Federation, May 2002 Creating Excellent Buildings: A guide for clients, CABE, October 2003 Recommendations for Living at Superdensity, Design for Homes, June 2007
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Appendices
1 Space Standards Study 2 Furniture Schedule 3 Wheelchair User Housing Design Standards 4 Denitions 5 References
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Dining
dining area calculated as difference of kitchen dining and kitchen
Living
Combined Kitchen/ Living/Dining:
Double
Twin
Single
3400 2400
RB WM FF
3600
3300
2600
2600
3500
1-person
SU
21 sq.m
BU
CYL
2400
6.2 sq.m
12.0 sq.m
2600
WM RB
4000
3700
4000 750
1-bed, 2-persons
2600
2600
3500
SU
23 sq.m
T DW
BU
FF
CYL
6.8 sq.m
3000
13.0 sq.m
2900
WM RB
4000
2-bed, 3-persons
2800
2600
3500
SU
DW
BU
FF
CYL
3000
25 sq.m
2400
7.5 sq.m
14.0 sq.m
4000 2900
WM RB
4000
4000 750
4000
2-bed, 4-persons
3000
2600
3700
27 sq.m
SU
DW
BU
FF
CYL
3000
3000
7.5 sq.m
14.8 sq.m
4000 3200
4000
4000 750
4000 3300
3-bed, 5-persons
3200
3000
3000
BU
WM
RB
4000
2600
29 sq.m
AE
DW
BU
FF
CYL
2400
8.3 sq.m
SU
16.0 sq.m
4250
4000 750
DW
BU
FF
CYL
9.6 sq.m
SU
17.0 sq.m
2400
4-bed, 6-persons
2600
3600
4000
31 sq.m
3000
3300
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Bathroom
Storage/Utility
GIA
Net Internal Circulation: Partition walls allow 5 %
[exc. amenity]
Circulation Layouts
Stairs for 3m floor to floor height 15 steps 230/200
300
800
2000
1945
1500
3 13
33.5 sq.m
4 sq.m
0 75
2 sq.m
37 sq.m
1850
750
1330
Storage 1p 1 sq.m
900
1050
2100
5 12
41 sq.m
5 sq.m
1500
2.5 sq.m
50 sq.m
0 75
900
1050
750
2000
900
1050
ground level
1st level
2nd Level
2100
51.5 sq.m
2100
1900
1900
1400
6 sq.m
2660
54.5 sq.m
750
3.5 sq.m
77 sq.m
ground level
1st level
2120
3 sq.m
61 sq.m
0 75
2nd Level
2100
58 sq.m
3.5 sq.m
70 sq.m
Variations
3-bed, 4-persons 1 level flat: 70-12+(8x2) = 74 sq.m 2 storey house: 83-12+ (8x2) = 87 sq.m 3 storey house: 87+6 = 93 sq.m 3-bed, 6-persons 1 level flat: 99-16+12 = 95 sq.m 2 storey house: 107-16+12 = 103 sq.m 3 storey house: 113-16+12 = 109 sq.m 4-bed, 5-persons 1 level flat: 86-12+(8x2) = 90 sq.m 2 storey house: 96-12+ (8x2) = 100 sq.m 3 storey house: 102-12+ (8x2) = 106 sq.m
2100
1900
0 18
1950
0 75
750
1400
7 sq.m
3300
60 sq.m
4 sq.m
83 sq.m
2100
1150
71 sq.m
3400
1 Level Flat + 10.5 sq.m 2 Storey House + 19 sq.m 2 Storey House + 25 sq.m
4.5 sq.m
86 sq.m
2100
1945
1850 750
2000
2100
72 sq.m
5.0 sq.m
96 sq.m
Wheelchair WC Bathroom + WC WITH shower 3.6 sq.m 6.8 sq.m required on entrance level for multilevel units
3.6 sq.m
4000
8 sq.m
72 sq.m
5.0 sq.m
102 sq.m
2100
1150
81.5 sq.m
4000
1 Level Flat + 12.5 sq.m 2 Storey House + 19 sq.m 2 Storey House + 25 sq.m
5.0 sq.m
99 sq.m
*Key to Kitchen Items AE BU CYL DR DW FF RB SU T WM Ancillary Equipment Base Unit Hot Water Cylinder Drawers Dishwasher-optional Fridge Freezer Recycle Bins Storage Unit Tray Space Washing Machine
2100
20 0 60 00
WM
1800
2250
TD CYL
2100
1945
1850
2000
82.5 sq.m
9 sq.m
5.5 sq.m
107 sq.m
1000
0 75
3.6 sq.m
4600
82.5 sq.m
5.5 sq.m
113 sq.m
93
600 FF
1000
600
630 WM
1200 450 DW BU
300 RB
600 600
600
1000
600
630 600
1600
300
3p
CYL
FF
WM
DW
BU
RB
600 FF
1000
600
630 600 WM DW
1600
300
BU
RB
600 FF
1000
600
630 600 WM DW
1600 BU
600 AE
600 RB
600 600
600
1000
600
630 600
2700
600
600
6p
CYL
FF
WM
DW
BU
AE
RB
800
Table 1p-2p
Table 3p
1000
Table 4p
1200
Table 4p
800
1500
1650
500 500
SB
SB
SB
Table 6p
Table 7p
Circulation Zones
1400x1700 Turning Ellipse 1500 Turning Circle
1300 width 900
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length
1350
650
500
450
300
850
2000
600
Armchair
Settee
Settee
Coffee Table
600
Space for TV
SU
Storage Unit
700
300 450
500
PC/Laptop Desk
Visitors Chair
Heat Source
Occasional Table
400
400
2000
400
250
2000
400
1200
Heat Source
1050
350 450
600
600
Double Wardrobe
Single Wardrobe
Chest of Drawers
700
500
Activity Zones
110
2000x2500 4p dwellings and larger Dressing/Drying Space 700x1100 Bed Making Space 400x Length of Bedspace
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Type Of Space
Furniture Schedule
Furniture Sizes mm
Dwelling Size 1p 2 2p 2 3p 3 4p 1 5p 2 6p 3 7p 4 + +1
Living Space
arm chair combination to equal one seat/person settee 2 seat (optional; as above) settee 3 seat (optional; as above) TV - [dim. Approx. 26 at] coffee table occasional table storage units PC/Laptop desk and chair space for visitors chair
850x850
850x1300 850x1850 220x650 500x1050 or 750 diameter 450x450 500x1000/ incrementally larger 1050x500 450x450 450x450 800x800 / incrementally larger 450x1000 / incrementally larger 1000 1 2 2 800 1000 1000 1 2 2 800 1000 1000 1 2 3 1000 1000 1500 1 2 4 1200 1200 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2000 1 2 5 1350 1500 1 1 1 1 2000 1 2 6 1500 1500 1 1 1 1 2000 1 2 7 1650 1500 1 1 1 + 1 2 + + +
Dining Space
Bedrooms Double Bedroom Optional Double bed 2 x single bed bedside table dressing table and chair/stool chest of drawers double wardrobe Twin Bedroom 2 x single bed bedside table chest of drawers table and chair/stool double wardrobe 2000x1500 2000x900 400x400 500x1050 450 x750 600x1200 2000x900 400x400 450 x750 500x1050 600x1200 n/a 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 n/a 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
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Furniture Schedule single bed bedside table chest of drawers table and chair/stool single wardrobe Total bed spaces
Dwelling Size 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 5 1 1 1 1 1 6 1 1 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 1 1 +
Kitchen 1. sink top drainer 2. cooker space 3. washing machine position/worktop 4. other base units Optional 4a. dishwasher/ worktop- (included in 4) 5. ancillary equipment space 6. fridge/freezer space 7. hot water cylinder 8. tray space 9. recycling bins space 10. length of tments (items 1to 9) Note: Item 3,5 6,7,9 may be in adjacent rooms to the kitchen Bathroom WC+cistern Bath Wash hand basin Optional Separate Toilet shower tray WC+cistern cloakroom basin 500x700 700x1700 600x400 750x750 600x1000 600x600 600x630 600x length 600x length
length in mm 1000 600 630 600 1000 600 630 1200 1000 600 630 1600 1000 600 630 1600 1000 600 630 1600 1000 600 630 2700 1000 600 630 2700 1000 600 630 +
600x length 600x600 600x600x1950[H] 600x150 600x length 600 600 inc 300 4330 600 600 inc 300 4930 600 600 inc 300 5330 600 600 inc 300 5330
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1 area in m
1 1
1 1
1 1
1 1
Storage
1.5
2.5
3.5
0.5
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technical advice of the WHDG. References to further technical information contained in the WHDG are included next to the guidance text below. Some London boroughs, including Waltham Forest, Greenwich and the SE London Partnership boroughs, have their own wheelchair user housing standards. Where these standards go beyond the accessibility and space standards of the GLA BPG, developers should comply with borough policy. Design Considerations for Wheelchair Accessible Housing Inclusion An overriding principle is to aim for inclusive solutions, avoid differentiating by location, form and detailing, and providing a choice of size, aspect and oor level in multi-storey developments.
59. London Plan Policy 3A.4 and Draft Replacement London Plan Policy 3.8, Housing Choice 60. Accessible London Implementation Point 13 61. Department of Transports publication Inclusive Mobility14
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100
101
102
14. Windows
Ensure independent control of opening windows, passive and mechanical ventilation to requirements of Building Regulations and to reasonable level of comfort. Ensure a balance of daylight, views out, privacy and security. Approach Ensure that a wheelchair user can approach each window to operate controls for opening and ventilation (WHDG 14.2.1). Transoms Avoid full-width transoms (horizontal divisions) between 800 and 1500mm high (WHDG 14.2.6).
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Appendix 4 - Denitions
Adaptable: The ability to modify spaces for a new use or purpose by altering the physical fabric of the building, such as removing or moving internal walls or extending a property.Families: Households with at least one child under 18 years old. Family housing: Two-bedroom, three-person homes and homes for larger households. Flexible: The ability for spaces to accommodate a range of uses and respond to altered circumstances. Gross Internal Area: (GIA) Gross Internal Area is the area of a building measured to the internal face of the perimeter walls at each oor level. Measurement should be in accordance with the RICS Guidance Note Code of Measuring Practice 6th Edition. The Gross Internal Area includes oor area of habitable and non-habitable rooms plus circulation, plus area taken up by internal partitions. It does not include the area of external private amenity space. Specics of what is and is not to be included in the measurement of internal space when undertaking the dwelling space assessment. Not to be included: Perimeter wall thicknesses and external projections Central lobby areas, passageways and other communal areas shared with other units. Any space where the height to the ceiling is less than 1.5m (e.g. elements of rooms with sloping ceilings, external dustbin enclosures, etc,) Porches, covered ways, etc Balconies (private, escape and access) and decks Voids and air wells Non-habitable basements, attics, thermal buffer zones or sheds. External storage space (see unit layout for this requirement) All space for purposes other than housing (e.g. garages, commercial premises etc). Conservatories not forming an integral part of the habitable space To be included: Floor area measured between the inside faces of the nished enclosing walls of each unit, including the space taken up by the following: Private staircases Partitions Internal walls Heating appliances Internal chimney breast projections. Internal porches forming an integral part of the habitable space Internal storage space greater than 1.5m in height Conservatories forming an integral part of the habitable space Habitable Room: Habitable rooms provide the living accommodation of the dwelling. They include living room, dining room, study, home ofce, conservatory, bedroom etc. They exclude the bathroom, WC, utility room, store room and circulation space. A kitchen is not a habitable room unless it provides space for dining. Higher density: Densities exceeding 80 dwellings per hectare or 250 habitable rooms per hectare. Lifetime Homes: This refers to 16 design criteria that together create a exible blueprint for accessible and adaptable housing in any setting. The standard is managed by Habinteg Housing Association and the criteria are set out in full on www.lifetimehomes.org.uk. Since 2004 the London Plan has required all new housing in London to meet the Lifetime Homes standards. Secured By Design: Secured by Design (SBD) is a UK Police agship initiative that advocates designing out crime to promote safer neighbourhoods. Tenure Blind: The principle that dwellings of different tenures should be designed to be indistinguishable.
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Appendix 5 References
Accommodating Diversity: Housing Design in a Multicultural Society, National Housing Federation 1998 By Design - urban design and the planning system: towards better practice, DTLR, 2001 Capital Gains: Making high density housing work in London, London Housing Federation, May 2002 Car parking: what works where, English Partnerships and Design for Homes, 2006 Code for Sustainable Homes Technical Guidance, DCLG, October 2008 Creating Excellent Buildings: A guide for clients, CABE, October 2003 Crowded House: cramped living in Englands housing, Shelter, October 2004 Delivering Excellent Places: Building for Life, CABE/HBF, 2007 edition Design and Quality Standards, Housing Corporation, April 2007 Design and Quality Strategy, Housing Corporation, April 2007 Design of Accessible Housing: Lifetime Homes Code of Practice, BSI Draft for Development DD266:2007 Draft Replacement London Plan, GLA, October 2009 English Partnerships Quality Standards: Delivering Quality, English Partnerships, Revised November 2007 Higher Density Housing for families: a design and specication guide, London Housing Federation, October 2004 Homes for Today & Tomorrow, Ministry of Housing and Local Government, 1961 Housing for a Compact City, GLA, February 2003 Housing our Ageing Population Panel for Innovation Report (HAPPI), HCA, 2009 Housing Quality Indicators Form v4, Housing Corporation, April 2008 Housing Space Standards, HATC for the GLA, August 2006 Inclusive Design Toolkit, LDA, 2009 London Plan Best Practice Guidance on Wheelchair Accessible Housing, GLA, September 2007 London Plan Supplementary Planning Guidance (SPG) on Achieving an Inclusive Environment, GLA, April 2004 London Plan SPG on Providing for Children and Young Peoples Play and Informal Recreation, GLA, March 2008 London Plan SPG on Sustainable Design and Construction, GLA, May 2006 The Mayors Housing Strategy, GLA, February 2010 Perceptions of Privacy and Density in Housing, Design for Homes, 2003 Recommendations for Living at Superdensity, Design for Homes, June 2007 Rubbish in, Resources out, GLA and Design for London, 2008 Secured by Design New Homes, Association of Chief Police Ofcers, 2009 Standards and Quality in Development: A good practice guide (2nd edition), National Housing Federation, July 2008 The London Housing Strategy: Draft for public consultation, GLA, May 2009 The London Plan: Consolidated with alterations since 2004, GLA, February 2008 Urban Design Compendium, English Partnerships, November 2007 What Homebuyers Want, CABE, 2005 Wheelchair Housing Design Guide, Habinteg Housing Association, February 2006 Wheelchair Housing Best Practice Guide, GLA, September 2007
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Credits
Preparation of this guidance has been led by Design for London on behalf of the Mayor of London, with strong input from their parent organisation the London Development Agency, and from the Greater London Authority and the Homes and Communities Agency London region. Thanks are due to a huge range of organisations and individuals who have participated in the process. These include the following:
Consultant Team Deborah Mathieson Emily Greeves Architects Kieran Long Levitt Bernstein Mae Architects Navigant Consulting Proctor Matthews Architects PRP Architects Urban Initiatives Signicant Contributors Adams Kara Taylor Allford Hall Monaghan Morris Andrew Drury, HATC Ltd Beyond Green Broadway Malyan Chris Goodman Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment Cyril Sweett David Bonnett Associates Davis Langdon Design for Homes Design for London Advisory Group General Public Agency Graham Harrington GVA Grimley Habinteg HTA Achitects Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands London Fire Brigade Maccreanor Lavington Architects Metropolitan Police Service National Housing Federation, London region Pitman Tozer Architects Pollard Thomas Edwards Architects RIBA Housing Group Richard Rogers Riches Hawley Mikhail Architects Robin Murray Royal College of Art Sergison Bates Architects Sheppard Robson Stephen Marshall Architects The Mayors Design Advisory Panel Transport for London Many London Boroughs including: LB Waltham Forest LB Southwark LB Kingston LB Westminster LB Croydon Several developers and housing associations including: East Thames Group Octavia Housing
With thanks also to others who have contributed to this guidance through participation at workshops and seminars, and to more than one hundred groups and individuals who responded formally to the consultation.
Graphic design by Atwork
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