London Planning Authorities

Projected Homes on Brownfield Land

Area of brownfield land multiplied by average borough housing density (based on 2020 housing projections), excluding green belt and metropolitan land. Note that this figure provides the potential additional dwellings based on existing densities rather than projected increases in density

1Wandsworth10,638
2Haringey7,441
3Barking & Dagenham7,371
4Tower Hamlets7,048
5Barnet6,665
6Islington4,641
7Greenwich4,291
8Lewisham3,962
9Redbridge3,844
10Southwark3,780
11Ealing3,587
12Kensington & Chelsea3,075
13Croydon2,957
14Camden2,648
15Harrow2,647
16Westminster2,643
17Richmond-upon-Thames2,612
18Hillingdon2,155
19Brent2,149
20Havering2,069
21Lambeth1,809
22Enfield1,399
23Sutton1,268
24Kingston-upon-Thames1,051
25Bromley971
26Merton937
27Waltham Forest755
28Hammersmith & Fulham564
29Bexley383
30Hackney349
31Newham332
32Hounslow315
33City of London0
Total96,356

Inner-London Borough

Outer-London Borough

(As defined by London Councils)

♦ Council Political Control

★ 2016 Mayoral Election Result

Sources

1) Wikipedia 2) "London's 'Protected' Land: the extent, location and character of designated Green Belt and Metropolitan Open Land in Greater London", 2018 (Greenspace Information for Greater London / Campaign for the Protection of the Rural Environment) 3) "State of Brownfield 2019", Campaign for the Protection of Rural England, 2019 (data from local authorities' brownfield land registers, varying dates). 4) "London Elections Results 2016, Wards, Boroughs, Constituency", Greater London Authority (GLA).

Related

Comparison Against London Plan EIP Housing Targets