London Planning Authorities

Comparison Against London Plan EIP Housing Targets

Compares the potential development capacity on brownfield land against the London Plan (Examination in Public) housing targets. Note that a comparison against small sites targets is not useful as the brownfield registers might include large sites which exceed 0.25Ha and therefore do not count as "small sites" under the Policy H2 definition

1Kensington & Chelsea63.01%
2Islington59.89%
3Wandsworth46.05%
4Haringey38.00%
5Barking & Dagenham32.56%
6Richmond-upon-Thames32.20%
7Westminster26.17%
8Camden24.38%
9Barnet21.27%
10Tower Hamlets20.07%
11Redbridge19.42%
12Harrow19.01%
13Lewisham18.72%
14Southwark14.80%
15Hillingdon13.88%
16Sutton13.50%
17Greenwich13.39%
18Ealing12.78%
19Lambeth11.38%
20Havering11.04%
21Croydon10.03%
22Kingston-upon-Thames7.71%
23Enfield7.46%
24Brent7.37%
25Merton7.05%
26Bromley6.82%
27Waltham Forest4.21%
28Hammersmith & Fulham3.42%
29Bexley3.08%
30Hackney2.63%
31Hounslow1.44%
32Newham0.86%
33City of London0.00%

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) Draft London Plan - Consolidated Suggested Changes Version July 2019, Policy H1 Increasing housing supply, Table 4.1, Mayor of London 4) "State of Brownfield 2019", Campaign for the Protection of Rural England, 2019 (data from local authorities' brownfield land registers, varying dates). 5) "London Elections Results 2016, Wards, Boroughs, Constituency", Greater London Authority (GLA).

Related

Area of Brownfield Land