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  • River Thames

    • Reference: 2001/0081-1
    • Question by: Louise Bloom
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    What place does the River Thames have in your vision for urban design in London? .
  • Environmental Sustainability

    • Reference: 2001/0088-1
    • Question by: Louise Bloom
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Will you seek to embody the principles of environmental sustainability in your flagship developments throughout London? .
  • Vandalism

    • Reference: 2001/0093-1
    • Question by: Louise Bloom
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Even commendable new design initiatives like the Millenium Park at Mile End in East London have been hit by vandalism, graffiti and litter. In what ways do you believe we can involve local people in developing the design of their environment so that they feel ownership of it, value and defend it? .
  • Architecture and Urbanism Unit

    • Reference: 2001/0097-1
    • Question by: Louise Bloom
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Will you simply advise the mayor or do you envisage that the mayor will advise you on the work of the Architecture and Urbanism Unit? .
  • 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? .
  • Promoting Skills (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: Louise Bloom
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    You touched on your discussions with the Boroughs. I wonder if you can just give us a bit more information about what you have actually done to offer the skills and guidance of the architect to urbanisation practitioners on the ground. You have spoken in the past about the lack of skills, the skill shortage in this area, and I think some of us familiar with local government are probably all too well aware that planners and architects at borough level are not necessarily the most imaginative folk around. So how are you going to pass on some of your...
  • Promoting Skills (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: Louise Bloom
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    Are all the boroughs actually aware that you are here now? This is something I am not quite clear on. Have you been in touch with all the chief architects and surveyors in all the boroughs, at least to let them know what you are doing and what your plans are?
  • Promoting Skills (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: Louise Bloom
    • Meeting date: 11 July 2001
    I would not guarantee that at all. Maybe I might suggest that as well as having got in touch with Chief Executives, you actually get in touch with the people we actually want to be talking to so they know you are here and we can have some influence further down the line.
  • 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...