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A little landscaping can go a long way

Posted: 13 February 2003 | Subscribe Online


Imaginatively utilised space is not often on the list of requirements for the socially deprived child - but it ought to be.

Last week, John Prescott was accused by the right wing press of "nationalising" private homes when he unveiled plans to give councils the power to lease out empty houses compulsorily in the South East. Over 70,000 houses have been empty for more than six months. In an area where too many families continue to be holed up in bed and breakfast hotels, and any number of properties are left to rot, why not recreate council housing under another name?
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In all the fuss about the socialist wolf allegedly reappearing in the New Labour sheep pen, another Prescott proposal received far less publicity. It announced the creation of a new body, the Land Restoration Trust, which will turn nearly 4,000 acres of derelict land in towns and cities into open spaces.

It's an admirable scheme so long as consultation also includes the young voices that too often go unheard. "Grounds for Celebration," a study published last month, conducted by school grounds charity Learning Through Landscapes (LTL), demonstrates how improving the quality of a school's external environment - traditionally just a tarmac "space" - has a beneficial influence on children. The survey examines over 100 schools which, in the past six years, have redeveloped their playing space. Over half report a decrease in bullying, a third have seen vandalism reduced and all report a general improvement in behaviour and social interaction among pupils.
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In addition, nine out of 10 children said they had more fun in the school grounds and three-quarters of the schools reported an increase in the level of community and parental involvement.

Too often in the past, we've seen architect-imposed recreational areas and parks and the landscaped heart of housing developments turn literally into a waste of space - graffiti-embellished no-go areas which mean many children are kept permanently indoors.

LTL has been involved in a number of studies which indicate that if young people are genuinely included in the process of development (and the UK now has any number of community artists who thrive on collaboration to make the most of space); if their ideas are taken seriously and their skills incorporated, then not only is their enjoyment channelled away from antisocial behaviour - the project is also much more likely to have a long and healthy life, to the benefit of all.


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