London eyes Housing as New Way to Use Empty Space
<span style="font-weight: 400;">The City of London is planning for life after the pandemic. The overseers of the sparsely populated area announced plans on April 27th to build at least 1,500 homes in the next decade, along with exploring new ways to repurpose empty space. It has already flagged ambi
Published -
Apr 29, 2021 3:54 AM
The City of London is planning for life after the pandemic. The overseers of the sparsely populated area announced plans on April 27th to build at least 1,500 homes in the next decade, along with exploring new ways to repurpose empty space. It has already flagged ambitions to develop 122,500m² of shopping space over 15 years. The proposals come after lockdowns fuelled fierce debates about the future of work, spurring some banks in the Square Mile and Canary Wharf financial districts to accelerate plans to ditch office space. Vacancies across the City have soared 70% since the onset of the pandemic to more than 1-million square metres, according to Savills. “London remains a world-leading financial centre but we also know that to remain so we must adapt,” Catherine McGuinness, chair of the policy and resources committee at the City of London Corporation, said. We are “reimagining the Square Mile for the new normal and resurging from this difficult period better and stronger than ever”, she said. The permanent residential population of the City is estimated at 8,000, compared with about half a million workers who thronged its streets from Monday to Friday before the pandemic. The emphasis on more homes and shopping doesn’t mean the City is no longer building new offices; no fewer than nine new tower blocks are under construction or in the pipeline, a report outlining the proposals said. But the corporation is sending a firm message: the City is no longer just a bankers’ playground. It is embarking on a five-year marketing campaign which could promote all-night events similar to Paris’s Nuit Blanche arts festival or traffic-free days on weekends during the summer. Empty and underused spaces could be let cheaply to workers in creative industries. Visitors spend £2bn a year in the district, supporting 34,000 jobs across the culture, leisure, hospitality and retail sectors, according to the report outlining the proposals. The corporation will also seek to woo smaller, high-potential firms including technology companies and sectors not traditionally drawn to the City, such as biosciences, the report said. There are plans to make 5G technology available across the district.