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  • High Density Housing

    • Reference: 2001/0052-1
    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    What evidence do you have that Londoners want to live in high density areas? .
  • Sea of Faces, Islands of Segregation

    • Reference: 2001/0058-1
    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    In a recent New York Times article it was pointed out that communities are becoming more racially segregated. One of your fellow Mayoral Advisers has called for racially segregated schools. How can the London Plan contribute to developing London as a truly multi-cultural, multi-racial city rather than a patchwork quilt of ethnic enclaves? .
  • Resources

    • Reference: 2001/0073-1
    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Without serious resources, is not strategic urban design a waste of time? .
  • High Density Housing (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    If I can explain my prejudice in terms of this. First of all the Georgian density, are people talking about density in Georgian times with all those servants crammed into the cellars or are they talking about Georgian density now? But my real prejudice is that the real high densities I have seen are system-built, architect-designed estates, where certain categories of people were ghettoised, and are still ghettoised, in buildings, which when people have got a choice, they get out of as rapidly as possible. Now my worry is if we go down this high-density argument it is those people...
  • Strategic Views (Supplementary) [9]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    If I could take the liberty of asking a question I asked of witnesses at the SDS. For probably a majority of Londoners the key views nowadays are the London skyline as you steam down the M11, or the site at Canary Wharf as you come down the A20 off the M25, so they are very distant views and they are very much car driven views, and I think many people would think that they are enhanced by high buildings and the more sort of long distance skyline. Do you have a view on that?
  • Conflict of Interests (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    I know that you and I have a common interest in the Thames Gateway area, but it is a specific follow up I think to Meg's question. I believe your partnership may have been tendering for work within the Gateway area and that it may have been commissioned to do work by one of the major landowners within the Thames Gateway area. Now to an unsophisticated Londoner like myself, there is prima facie a problem there, because the Gateway is the key regeneration area in the Mayor's strategy. You are the Mayor's key advisor on regenerational planning in that area...
  • Conflict of Interests (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Just to follow up quickly, I have a feeling that, as much as I admire your work, that maybe you cannot actually do this job as the Mayor's advisor. Is it the case that your firm has been retained to do work at Canary Wharf for example? Were you retained after your appointment by the Mayor as his advisor?
  • Conflict of Interests (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Are you happy to publish a register of all of the sites in London where you are?
  • Conflict of Interests (Supplementary) [4]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Do you accept that a greater degree of publicity and scrutiny should be available in your case than for any other architects?