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Self-financing regeneration? Capturing land value through institutional innovations in public housing stock transfer, planning gain and financialisation

Thompson, M; Hepburn, PA

Self-financing regeneration? Capturing land value through institutional innovations in public housing stock transfer, planning gain and financialisation Thumbnail


Authors

M Thompson



Abstract

Social, economic and environmental aspects of building sustainable communities receive ample academic and policy attention; far less is paid to finding financially sustainable models of urban regeneration. This case study of the Hattersley Estate in Greater Manchester, England, provides insights into an innovative approach to financing estate regeneration via novel mechanisms of planning gain, stock transfer and tenure diversification, influenced by the Mixed Communities agenda. In the context of enduring spatially concentrated deprivation, state withdrawal of regeneration funding and residualisation and neglect of public housing stock by an absentee landlord – together rendering estate renewal too expensive for conventional stock transfer – regeneration partners have instead sought to leverage local land values for a ‘self-financing’ method of regeneration. This article describes how a novel business model and financialisation fix were conceived and implemented for Hattersley’s relatively successful estate regeneration; explores the political–economic implications and contradictions of this financialised approach for urban development trajectories; and draws critical connections between research on financialisation, land value capture and municipal entrepreneurialism.

Citation

Thompson, M., & Hepburn, P. (2022). Self-financing regeneration? Capturing land value through institutional innovations in public housing stock transfer, planning gain and financialisation. Town Planning Review, 93(3), 251-274. https://doi.org/10.3828/tpr.2021.41

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Jan 5, 2022
Publication Date May 1, 2022
Deposit Date Feb 21, 2023
Publicly Available Date Feb 21, 2023
Journal Town Planning Review
Print ISSN 0041-0020
Publisher Liverpool University Press
Volume 93
Issue 3
Pages 251-274
DOI https://doi.org/10.3828/tpr.2021.41
Keywords Urban Studies, Geography, Planning and Development
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.3828/tpr.2021.41

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