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Development corporation
Organisation to foster urban development

A development corporation or development firm is an organizations established by a government for the purpose of urban development. They often are responsible for the development of new suburban areas or the redevelopment of existing ones.

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Australia

In Australia development corporations are often responsible for the economic promotion and growth of areas considered to be under-performing economically. Such corporations include:

Denmark

India

Israel

South Africa

  • Coega Development Corporation
  • Eastern Cape Development Corporation
  • Free State Development Corporation

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, New Town Development Corporations were organisations established under the New Towns Act 1946 (9 & 10 Geo. 6. c. 68) by the UK government, charged with the urban development of an area, outside the usual system of Town and Country Planning in the United Kingdom. Originally intended to manage the development of New Towns in the United Kingdom, they were also established for more substantial urban renewal programmes by the Town Development Act 1952.

Urban development corporations in England and Wales

NameAreaTimeframeNotes
Birmingham Heartlands950 ha in the Nechells area1992–1998[1]
Black Countryparts of Sandwell and Walsall, in West Midlands1987–1998[2]
Bristolparts of eastern Bristol1989–1995[3]
Cardiff BayCardiff docklands area, in City of Cardiff and Vale of Glamorgan1987–2000[4]
Central Manchester180 ha of Manchester, near Trafford/Salford border1988–1996[5]
Leeds540 ha of Leeds, along River Aire/Leeds and Liverpool Canal, and south of city centre1988–1995[6]
London DocklandsLondon Docklands1981–1998
London Thames GatewayLower Lea Valley (parts of Hackney, Tower Hamlets, Newham and Waltham Forest)London Riverside (southern part of Barking & Dagenham, Havering and Newham)2004–2013
MerseysideMerseyside1981–1998
Plymouth67 ha of Plymouth docklands1993–1998[7]
SheffieldLower Don Valley1988–1997[8]
Teessidelarge tracts of land on River Tees, some in Hartlepool1987–1998[9]
Thurrock Thames GatewayThurrock2003–2012[10]
Trafford Parklarge area in Trafford and Salford along the Manchester Ship Canal1987–1998[11]
Tyne and Wearbanks of the River Tyne and River Wear1987–1998[12]
West NorthamptonshireNorthamptonshire (parts of Northampton, Daventry and Towcester)2006–2014

New town development corporations

NameAreaTimeframeNotes
Aycliffe and PeterleeNewton Aycliffe and Peterleeto April 1, 1988[13]
BasildonBasildon
BracknellBracknell
Central LancashireCentral Lancashire
CorbyCorby
CrawleyCrawley
CumbernauldCumbernauldto March 31, 1996
CwmbranCwmbranto April 1, 1988[14]
EbbsfleetEbbsfleet Valley2015 -[15]
East KilbrideEast Kilbride
GlenrothesGlenrothes
HarlowHarlow
Hemel HempsteadHemel Hempstead
LivingstonLivingston
Milton KeynesMilton Keynes, Buckinghamshireto April 1, 1992[16]
PeterboroughPeterboroughto October 1, 1988[17]
RedditchRedditch1964–1985
RuncornRuncornmerged to form Warrington and Runcorn
SkelmersdaleSkelmersdale1964-19842
StevenageStevenage11 Nov 1946 to 19803
TelfordTelford, Shropshireto October 1, 1991[18]
WarringtonWarringtonmerged to form Warrington and Runcorn
Warrington and RuncornWarrington and Runcornto October 1, 1989[19]
WashingtonWashingtonto April 1, 1988[20]

Mayoral development corporations

The Localism Act 2011 permitted the Mayor of London to create mayoral development corporations in Greater London. The Cities and Local Government Devolution Act 2016 permitted the creation of mayoral development corporations in combined authority areas.4

NameAuthorityAreaTimeframeNotes
London Legacy Development CorporationMayor of LondonLondon Olympic Park2012 -[21]
Old Oak and Park Royal Development CorporationMayor of LondonOld Oak Common2015 -[22]
South Tees Development CorporationTees Valley Combined AuthorityTees Valley2017 -[23]
Stockport Town Centre West Development CorporationGreater Manchester Combined AuthorityStockport2019 -[24]
Middlesbrough Development CorporationTees Valley Combined AuthorityMiddlesbrough2023 -[25]
Hartlepool Development CorporationTees Valley Combined AuthorityHartlepool2023-

See also

References

  1. "Honeysuckle Development Corporation. - People and organisations - Trove". trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 2017-07-15. http://trove.nla.gov.au/people/643874?c=people

  2. Ward, David (18 January 2006). "Redesign hopes to revive Skelmerdale's fortunes". The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/society/2006/jan/18/communities.guardiansocietysupplement2

  3. The Hidden Stevenage ISBN 0 86332 667 6 /wiki/ISBN_(identifier)

  4. "A Beginners Guide to UK Geography (2023)". Open Geography Portal. Office for National Statistics. 24 August 2023. Retrieved 9 December 2023. https://geoportal.statistics.gov.uk/datasets/a-beginners-guide-to-uk-geography-2023/about