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The Borough Council is required to create and maintain a Brownfield Land Register. The Brownfield Land Register identifies a number of eligible brownfield sites from around the Borough that the Council consider are suitable to accommodate residential development
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Register of previously developed (brownfield) land. NB. Completed/expired sites are NOT removed but can be filtered out by 'ENDDATE' column. To avoid misuse please read government data standard
This dataset is the brownfield land register for the Cheshire East area. It contains previously developed land within Cheshire East that the council considers appropriate for residential development (the brownfield land register).
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The sites listed in the register are those eligible sites which had planning permission at 31 March 2024 or were allocated for development in the Adopted Local Plan.Brownfield Land Registers are required to be reviewed every year. The register was last reviewed in Winter 2024.Having a site listed in the register does not mean it has been granted planning permission.
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The Government has set out its commitment to introduce a statutory brownfield register and ensure that 90% of suitable brownfield sites have planning permission for housing by 2020. The registers are intended set out information on brownfield sites which are suitable for housing development using a consistent set of information across council areas. The requirement for councils to prepare Brownfield Registers comes into effect shortly when details are announced by the Government. To inform the content and format of the final registers the Government invited Local Authorities to bid to become Brownfield Land Register pilots in February 2016.
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The Government has set out a commitment to introduce a statutory brownfield register in order to ensure that 90% of suitable brownfield sites have planning permission by 2020 as part of its plan to boost housebuilding. The Brownfield Land Register is a list of previously developed sites that may be suitable for potential future development.
This page provides the data for Isle of Wight Council Brownfield Register. It will be reviewed annually.
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Plymouth City Council's register of Brownfield Land suitable for housing development in accordance with legislation and Government guidance https://www.gov.uk/guidance/brownfield-land-registers. You can see the Data Standard used here https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/brownfield-land-registers-data-standard.
The brownfield register lists previously developed (brownfield) land within Oxford where residential development is considered suitable, available and achievable
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This is a dataset of the London Borough of Barnet's Brownfield Land Register The Town and Country Planning (Brownfield Land Register) Regulations 2017 require local planning authorities to maintain a register of their brownfield sites that are suitable for housing. The London Borough of Barnet Strategic Planning Committee signed off the 2022 Brownfield Land Register on 13 June 2023. Brownfield Land Register.pdf (moderngov.co.uk) Appendix 1 - BLR 2022.pdf (moderngov.co.uk) Part 1 lists brownfield land sites of at least 0.25ha or capable of providing 5 or more dwellings that are considered suitable for housing led development. Sites listed in Part 2 of the register will have been granted Permission in Principle. Local Planning Authorities are required to review registers at least once a year. Further information from the DCLG on Brownfield Land Registers is provided here Barnet is one of the Local Planning Authorities that received Government funding to improve their planning services through the Local Digital Fund. This aims to digitise Planning to make land and housing data easier to find, understand, use and trust. This data is also available on View planning and housing datasets with geographic location data on an interactive map here. Map of planning data for England | Planning Data This dataset has been published by the London Borough of Barnet under the Open Government Licence (OGL) (v3). Please acknowledge the Information Provider through the following attribution statement: © London Borough of Barnet, 2017, OGL, v3.0 Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right, 2017
The Council published its most recent brownfield land register in December 2024. It identifies brownfield sites with the potential to accommodate around 7,260 new homes across the borough. The register is updated annually. Registers are in two parts. This register forms Part 1, which includes all brownfield sites in the borough deemed appropriate for housing. Part 2 allows Councils to grant Permission in Principle. The Council has not started work on Part 2 of its register at the current time. The Part 1 register does not allocate land or assume that planning permission will be granted for housing or any other form of development. More information on brownfield registers is available in national planning practice guidance.
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Important Note
The Brownfield data was handed over from LDA to the Homes and Communities Agency so that HCA could maintain it as part of the National Land Use Database (NLUD). The HCA’s online mapping site displays a points only version of NLUD from 2010 (password protected):
<https://signet.hca-online.org.uk/live/custom/login/SIGnet.aspx>
The links to the files below will remain here as a matter of historical record.
Polygons showing the boundaries of Brownfield land in London along with their addresses.
This database of Brownfield land replaces in more detail and accuracy the EP National Land Use Database (NLUD) for London. The current NLUD assessment covers sites in excess of 0.25ha. This project validates, checks and updates this information for existing NLUD sites plus new sites down to a smaller threshold of 0.1 hectares and above.
The Database records over 2,000 Brownfield sites across London, equivalent to more than 2% of the land in Greater London (an increase of over 1,000 sites than recorded on the previous system). The Homes and Communities Agency will use the database as their preferred platform for boroughs to record brownfield sites.
The London Database uses Geographic Information Systems (GIS) mapping. It includes transport routes, deprivation, social infrastructure, as well as heritage and natural environment assets that can be overlaid over the dataset of brownfield land. Visitors to the Database website can identify sites suitable for development, and better explore and understand a site’s context.
Brownfield sites
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What is the brownfield land register The Brownfield Land Register is a new initiative to provide up-to-date and consistent information on previously developed sites which are considered appropriate for residential development. Through the Register the council can identify suitable brownfield sites and may also grant 'permission in principle' for residential development. The Register is updated and published on an annual basis. The Peterborough Brownfield Land Register 2018, available to download below, and has been prepared in accordance with government's data standard. View the brownfield land register The Register is published in CSV format (Comma Separated Values i.e. plain text) and GML format (Geography Markup Language i.e. to express geographical features using a GIS Mapping system). In addition, the Council has prepared a summary report which explains the context of the Brownfield Land Register. Data is released under the government's Open Data agreement. For full details, please click here: https://www.peterborough.gov.uk/council/planning-and-development/planning-policies/brownfield-site-register/
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The Town and Country Planning (Brownfield Land Register) Regulations 2017 came into force on 16 April 2017 and require Councils to prepare, maintain and publish registers of previously developed (brownfield) land they consider to be appropriate for housing development by 31 December 2017. The regulations set out the criteria with regard to suitability, availability and achievability that sites have to comply with, in the opinion of the local planning authority, in order to be included in the register. They also set a site size threshold for inclusion of 0.25 hectares or being capable of supporting at least 5 dwellings.
For further information visit http://www.wakefield.gov.uk/planning/policy/brownfield-land-register
An interactive map is available at http://map.wakefield.gov.uk/connect/analyst/?mapcfg=BLregister&x=438693&y=419241&zoom=3
The brownfield land register comprises:Brownfield sites that have been granted planning permission and are either under construction or not startedBrownfield sites that are allocated in adopted or emerging Local PlansBrownfield sites identified in Strategic Housing Land Availability Assessment/Strategic Housing and Economic Housing Land Availability Assessments that have been assessed as being suitable, available and achievable for housing against criteria in the National Planning Policy Framework.
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The Council has published Part 1 of its first Brownfield Land Register which provides up-to-date and consistent information on brownfield sites that the Council considers as being appropriate for residential development.
For more information visit: http://www.doncaster.gov.uk/services/planning/brownfield-land-register
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All local planning authorities in England are required to produce and publish a register of land that has been previously built on (brownfield sites). The register includes brownfield sites that are considered suitable for residential development. The register will be updated at least once a year.
The register is in two parts:
Part 1 - includes sites that have been assessed and are considered suitable for residential development, e.g. sites with planning permission or allocations in local plans
Part 2 - will include sites that are in in Part 1 which are considered as suitable for the granting of planning permission in principle for residential development
Please note that currently the register only contains sites in Part 1
🇬🇧 영국 English Leeds City Council was selected as a pilot authority for the Government's brownfield land register project to help lead the way in bringing forward previously developed land for new homes. The Council worked with the Department for Communities and Local Government to help inform guidance on the operation of the brownfield registers. The registers will help house builders identify suitable sites quickly, speeding up the construction of new homes. The government has pledged to get planning permission in place on 90% of suitable brownfield sites for housing. To help achieve this goal, the government is to enable ‘permission in principle’ to be granted for housing-led development sites listed on new brownfield registers as part of the recent Housing and Planning Act 2016. The Council will have the final say on which sites are on the register and which sites will have permission in principle. When deciding on which sites to include in the register, the Council will consider the housing growth ambitions of the Core Strategy and Site Allocations Plan. As part of pilot project, the Council put together a register of suitable sites with a total capacity of over 30,000 new homes sourced from the Strategic Housing Land Availability Assessment (SHLAA). The new formal requirement is for the register to be kept in two parts. The Council has produced a formal Part 1 register and the accompanying map of sites is published before the annual 31 December deadline, this will be reviewed at least once a year. The map of sites is hosted here . Part 2 allows the Council to select sites from Part 1 and grant Permission in Principle (PIP) for housing-led development, after undertaking necessary requirements for publicity, notification and consultation. Entry onto Part 1 of the register does not guarantee that this site will progress onto Part 2 of the register or receive planning permission. Preparatory work on Part 2 commenced in 2018 and will continue in early 2019. The Council is welcoming comments from the public on the sites included in the register and asking landowners to put forward sites for consideration in the future register. The sites must be previously developed and able to accommodate 5 or more dwellings or be at least 0.25 hectares in size. If you would like to submit a site to the next register that you think could be developed for housing, please send details of the location and availability of the site including an outline plan to brownfieldlandregister@leeds.gov.uk .
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The Town and Country Planning (Brownfield Land Register) Regulations 2017 require each local planning authority responsible for determining applications for housing development to prepare, maintain and publish a register of previously developed land in their area which they consider appropriate for residential development. The Register comprises two parts: Part 1 – all brownfield sites, at least 0.25ha in area or capable of supporting at least 5 dwellings, that a local planning authority has assessed as appropriate for residential development. Part 2 – only those sites included in Part 1 that the local planning authority has decided would be suitable for a grant of permission in principle for residential development. The Register is designed to provide transparent, up-to-date and consistent information about suitable and available brownfield sites in the local area assessed as appropriate for housing and is updated at least once a year. The Register is published at https://www.stroud.gov.uk/brownfield-land The Brownfield Register is available in a choice of formats:
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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The Borough Council is required to create and maintain a Brownfield Land Register. The Brownfield Land Register identifies a number of eligible brownfield sites from around the Borough that the Council consider are suitable to accommodate residential development