Summary
In the UK, particularly post-Second World War, urban renewal and decongestion programmes created peripheral housing estates. From the beginning these estates were not endowed with any sustaining social and economic life. Moreover, most of the residents were in the lower percentile of the urban poor, as well as being disadvantaged from a multiple perspective. Over the years, these estates have deteriorated socially, environmentally and economically. A number of limited efforts made in the past to improve the general well-being of the residents have not achieved appreciable success.
In recent times, it has been recognised that only by a comprehensive approach can the peripheral estates be regenerated (or generated?). The ‘New Life for Urban Scotland’ programme is aimed at doing this. This paper attempts to evaluate the impact of the programme of environmental improvement in Castlemilk and Ferguslie Park, both peripheral housing estates on the outskirts of Glasgow, Scotland. The impact areas studied are: land-use pattern and environmental quality; retail and shopping facility development; leisure and recreation; roads, streetscape and local transport services; environmental improvement expenditure. Some possible improvements in the programme are proposed for the future.
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Dr Sam C. Ofori undertook this study as part of a Master's Thesis with the School of Planning at the University of Central England.
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Ofori, S.C. Urban policy and environmental regeneration in two Scottish peripheral housing estates. Environmentalist 14, 283–295 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02239790
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02239790