London Planning Authorities

Total Change in Housing Targets

Difference between 2018 'Examination in Public' version of the London Plan and the 2019 'Publication London Plan December 2020' version.

1City of London0
2Islington0
3Old Oak Common and Park Royal Development Corporation0
4Hackney-20
5London Legacy Development Corporation-70
6Westminster-250
7Tower Hamlets-380
8Hammersmith & Fulham-390
9Kensington & Chelsea-400
10Camden-480
11Southwark-1,990
12Lambeth-2,540
13Barking & Dagenham-3,200
14Wandsworth-3,600
15Haringey-3,660
16Greenwich-3,800
17Hounslow-4,000
18Richmond-upon-Thames-4,000
19Kingston-upon-Thames-4,000
20Merton-4,100
21Lewisham-4,500
22Sutton-4,700
23Hillingdon-4,700
24Waltham Forest-5,300
25Bexley-5,600
26Redbridge-5,700
27Newham-5,700
28Havering-5,900
29Brent-5,900
30Harrow-5,900
31Enfield-6,300
32Bromley-6,500
33Ealing-6,500
34Barnet-7,700
35Croydon-8,700
Total-126,480

Inner-London Borough

Outer-London Borough

(As defined by London Councils)

♦ Council Political Control

★ 2016 Mayoral Election Result

Sources

1) Draft London Plan - Consolidated Suggested Changes Version July 2019, Policy H1 Increasing housing supply, Table 4.1, Mayor of London 2) Publication London Plan December 2020, Policy H1 Increasing housing supply, Table 4.1, Mayor of London 3) "London Elections Results 2016, Wards, Boroughs, Constituency", Greater London Authority (GLA).

Related

10-Year Housing Target, 2021 Current London Plan