Home | Email | AIM | Help | Make AOL My Homepage
 Saturday, 17 May 2008

Lifestyle

Go Green

| |
Powered by Google

'Garden grabbing' has doubled - MP

- Search: Garden grabbing figures

A Tory MP claims 'garden grabbing' has doubled under Labour
A Tory MP claims 'garden grabbing' has doubled under Labour

The number of new homes being built on garden space has doubled since Labour came to power, it has been claimed.

Conservative MP Greg Clark said 11% of new dwellings were built on previously residential land in 1997, but the figure stood at 22% by 2006.

Levels of "garden grabbing", in which property developers buy up family homes with gardens and typically replace them with apartment blocks, had jumped from last year's figure of 18%.

The figures, contained in a written answer to Mr Clark from the Department for Communities and Local Government, showed London saw the biggest annual rise in building on gardens from 16% in 2005 to 29% in 2006.

He accused the Government of holding back the data until after the local and London mayoral elections, during which time Boris Johnson campaigned against the practice of garden grabbing in the capital.

The figures also showed South East England was suffering the most acute loss of gardens, with 32% of new homes from previously residential land in 2006.

The East of England and East Midlands were also suffering big rises in garden grabbing, Mr Clark said.

He said: "These figures prove more and more gardens are being bulldozed under Labour. This is how they achieve their brownfield development targets - not by regenerating derelict land, but by destroying green space in our towns, cities and suburbs."

But Iain Wright, Housing Minister, accused the Conservatives of being "disingenuous".

He said: "These figures include conversions and the replacement of run-down houses and estates. Only a fraction involve development on back gardens. We are building more homes than ever before on former industrial sites to protect green spaces."