New towns in the United Kingdom
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Below is a list of some of the new towns in the United Kingdom created under the various New Town Acts of the 20th century.
Designated new towns were removed from local authority control and placed under the supervision of a Development Corporation, all of which have now been disbanded. The Corporations were later disbanded with assets being split between local authorities and, in England, the Commission for New Towns (now English Partnerships).
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- Letchworth, Hertfordshire (founded in 1903 through the Garden city movement)
- Welwyn Garden City (founded in 1920 through the Garden city movement) and Hatfield
The first wave was to help alleviate the housing shortages post-World War II, in the green belt around London. A couple of sites in County Durham were also designated. These designations were made under the New Towns Act 1946.
- Basildon, Essex (designated 4 January 1949) [1]
- Bracknell (designated 17 June 1949) [2]
- Corby (designated 1 April 1950)[3]
- Crawley (designated 9 January 1947) [4]
- Harlow (designated 25 March 1947) [5]
- Hemel Hempstead (designated 4 February 1947) [6]
- Newton Aycliffe (designated 19 April 1947 as 'Aycliffe New Town') [7]
- Peterlee (designated 10 March 1948, as 'Easington New Town') [8]
- Stevenage (designated 1 November 1946) [9]
- Welwyn and Hatfield (both designated 20 May 1948) [10]
The second wave (1961-64) was to help assuage housing short falls. Two of the below (Redditch and Telford) are situated near the West Midlands conurbation, another two (Runcorn and Skelmersdale) are situated near Merseyside.
- Redditch (designated April 10, 1964) [11]
- Runcorn (designated April 10, 1964) [12]
- Skelmersdale (designated October 9, 1961) [13]
- Dawley New Town (designated January 16, 1963) [14]
- Washington (designated July 24, 1964) [15]
Cramlington and Killingworth were constructed from the 1960s by local authorities and were not designated new towns.
The Third and last wave of new towns (1967-70) allowed for additional growth chiefly further north from the previous London new towns, with a few developments between Liverpool and Manchester. Dawley New Town was re-designated as Telford New Town with a much larger area.
- Central Lancashire (designated March 26, 1970) [16]
- Milton Keynes (designated January 23, 1967) [17]
- Northampton (designated February 14, 1968) [18]
- Peterborough (designated July 21, 1967) [19]
- Telford (designated November 29, 1969) [20]
- Warrington (designated April 26, 1968) [21]
No new towns have been designated since 1970.
- Cwmbran (designated November 4, 1949) [22]
- Newtown (designated December 18, 1967) [23]
- Cumbernauld (designated 1956)
- East Kilbride (designated 1947)
- Glenrothes (designated June 1948)
- Irvine (designated 1966)
- Livingston (designated 1962)
The New Towns Act (Northern Ireland) 1965 gave the Minister of Development of the Government of Northern Ireland the power to designate an area as a New Town, and to appoint a Development Commission. An order could be made to transfer municipal functions of all or part of any existing local authorities to the commission, which took the additional title of urban district council, although unelected. This was done in the case of Craigavon.
The New Towns Amendment Act (Northern Ireland) 1968 was passed to enable the establishment of the Londonderry Development Commission to replace the County Borough and rural district of Londonderry, and implement the Londonderry Area Plan. On April 3, 1969 the development commission took over the municipal functions of the two councils, the area becoming Londonderry Urban District.
- Craigavon (designated July 26, 1965) [24]
- Londonderry (designated February 5, 1969) (see above) [25]
- ^ London Gazette, January 7, 1949
- ^ London Gazette, June 21, 1949
- ^ London Gazette. April 4, 1950
- ^ London Gazette. January 10, 1947
- ^ London Gazette. March 28, 1947
- ^ London Gazette. February 7, 1947
- ^ London Gazette. April 25, 1947
- ^ London Gazette. March 12, 1948
- ^ London Gazette. November 12, 1946
- ^ London Gazette. May 25, 1948
- ^ London Gazette. April 14, 1964
- ^ London Gazette, April 14, 1964
- ^ London Gazette, October 10, 1961
- ^ London Gazette, January 18, 1964
- ^ London Gazette, July 28, 1964
- ^ London Gazette. April 14, 1970.
- ^ London Gazette. January 24, 1967
- ^ London Gazette. February 20, 1968
- ^ London Gazette. August 1, 1967
- ^ London Gazette, December 13, 1964
- ^ London Gazette. April 30, 1968
- ^ London Gazette. November 8, 1949
- ^ London Gazette. December 28, 1967
- ^ Belfast Gazette, August 6, 1965
- ^ [1] A commentary by the Government of Northern Ireland to accompany the Cameron Report incorporating an account of progress and a programme of action (CAIN web service)