-
Study
-
Quick Links
- Open Days & Events
- Real-World Learning
- Unlock Your Potential
- Tuition Fees, Funding & Scholarships
- Real World Learning
-
Undergraduate
- Application Guides
- UCAS Exhibitions
- Extended Degrees
- School & College Outreach
- Information for Parents
-
Postgraduate
- Application Guide
- Postgraduate Research Degrees
- Flexible Learning
- Change Direction
- Register your Interest
-
Student Life
- Students' Union
- The Hub - Student Blog
- Accommodation
- Northumbria Sport
- Support for Students
-
Learning Experience
- Real-World Learning
- Research-enriched learning
- Graduate Futures
- The Business Clinic
- Study Abroad
-
-
International
International
Northumbria’s global footprint touches every continent across the world, through our global partnerships across 17 institutions in 10 countries, to our 277,000 strong alumni community and 150 recruitment partners – we prepare our students for the challenges of tomorrow. Discover more about how to join Northumbria’s global family or our partnerships.
View our Global Footprint-
Quick Links
- Course Search
- Undergraduate Study
- Postgraduate Study
- Information for Parents
- London Campus
- Northumbria Pathway
- Cost of Living
- Sign up for Information
-
International Students
- Information for International Students
- Northumbria and your Country
- International Events
- Application Guide
- Entry Requirements and Education Country Agents
- Global Offices and Regional Teams
- English Requirements
- English Language Centre
- International student support
- Cost of Living
-
International Fees and Funding
- International Undergraduate Fees
- International Undergraduate Funding
- International Masters Fees
- International Masters Funding
- International Postgraduate Research Fees
- International Postgraduate Research Funding
- Useful Financial Information
-
International Partners
- Agent and Representatives Network
- Global Partnerships
- Global Community
-
International Mobility
- Study Abroad
- Information for Incoming Exchange Students
-
-
Business
Business
The world is changing faster than ever before. The future is there to be won by organisations who find ways to turn today's possibilities into tomorrows competitive edge. In a connected world, collaboration can be the key to success.
More on our Business Services-
Business Quick Links
- Contact Us
- Business Events
- Research and Consultancy
- Education and Training
- Workforce Development Courses
- Join our mailing list
-
Education and Training
- Higher and Degree Apprenticeships
- Continuing Professional Development
- Apprenticeship Fees & Funding
- Apprenticeship FAQs
- How to Develop an Apprentice
- Apprenticeship Vacancies
- Enquire Now
-
Research and Consultancy
- Space
- Energy
- AI and Tech
- CHASE: Centre for Health and Social Equity
- NESST
-
-
Research
Research
Northumbria is a research-rich, business-focused, professional university with a global reputation for academic quality. We conduct ground-breaking research that is responsive to the science & technology, health & well being, economic and social and arts & cultural needs for the communities
Discover more about our Research-
Quick Links
- Research Peaks of Excellence
- Academic Departments
- Research Staff
- Postgraduate Research Studentships
- Research Events
-
Research at Northumbria
- Interdisciplinary Research Themes
- Research Impact
- REF
- Partners and Collaborators
-
Support for Researchers
- Research and Innovation Services Staff
- Researcher Development and Training
- Ethics, Integrity, and Trusted Research
- University Library
- Vice Chancellors Fellows
-
Research Degrees
- Postgraduate Research Overview
- Doctoral Training Partnerships and Centres
- Academic Departments
-
Research Culture
- Research Culture
- Research Culture Action Plan
- Concordats and Commitments
-
-
About Us
-
About Northumbria
- Our Strategy
- Our Staff
- Our Schools
- Place and Partnerships
- Leadership & Governance
- University Services
- Northumbria History
- Contact us
- Online Shop
-
-
Alumni
Alumni
Northumbria University is renowned for the calibre of its business-ready graduates. Our alumni network has over 253,000 graduates based in 178 countries worldwide in a range of sectors, our alumni are making a real impact on the world.
Our Alumni - Work For Us
In an article written for The Conversation*, Cameron McEwan, Associate Professor in Architecture at Northumbria University and Andreas Lechner, Associate Professor at Graz University of Technology, focus their research on the urban-nature divide, providing a solution of building on the greenbelt to solve the housing crisis.
Amid new targets of 1.5m new homes over five years, the Labour party has pledged to review the planning rules which dictate where housing in England can be built. The shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has said that “a common-sense approach” to deciding quite what land is worth protecting and what can sensibly be used to create more housing was crucial.
This may put Labour at odds with many Conservative politicians in the UK, who have long defended the greenbelt, the protected land that encircles the country’s largest cities, including London, Newcastle and Manchester. The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities’s latest long-term plans for housing prioritise urban development of brownfield sites (abandoned or underutilised industrial land) over so-called greenbelt “erosion.”
The notion of “concreting over the countryside,” as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has put it, is politically loaded. Yet, elements of the Conservative party itself are beginning to see that this oversimplifies the issue. As former housing minister Brandon Lewis has said at a fringe event at the Tory conference, the concept “needs to be reviewed and changed”.
It no longer makes sense to prioritise the city centre over its peripheries because quite what is in the city, and what is outside it, is no longer clear. Multiple factors have seen the city extend into a continuous periphery. These include uneven urbanisation and geo-engineered landscapes, changing working patterns and locations and the perceived conflation of nature with culture.
Our research looks at how to rethink the urban-nature divide. We have found that design that focuses on urban peripheries in socially diverse and sustainable ways can benefit residents, combat climate change and tackle the housing crisis.
The politics of ‘urban sprawl’
In his long-term housing policy, Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Michael Gove has made the connection between urban planning, aesthetic standards and climate change. He argues against what he and many before him have termed “urban sprawl”. Instead, making the city centre more dense, he says, will “enhance economic efficiency, free up leisure time and also help with climate change”.
In city planning terms, “density” refers to the degree of human activity and occupation in a defined unit of urban space. It is, of course, an important measure. Our research shows, however, that what matters most is not the numbers of people and businesses in a city, but the quality of the space in which they operate.
Housing is an inherently political issue. Shelter, the housing charity, states that 17.5 million people are trapped by the housing emergency. According to the Centre for Cities thinktank, Britain has a backlog of 4.3 million homes missing from the national housing stock. This analysis shows that it would take at least 50 years to fill this deficit, if the government’s current target to build 300,000 homes a year in England is met. And it won’t be: homes are being built at approximately half this rate.
However, in 2013, the economist Paul Cheshire wrote that what he termed “the greenbelt myth” was, in fact, driving the housing crisis. “Contrary to popular perception,” he said, “less than 10% of England is developed. And of what is developed much less than half is ‘covered by concrete’.”
Instead, Cheshire proposed that there be selective building on what he termed “the least attractive and lowest amenity parts of greenbelts.” Not only are these areas close to cities where people want to live, but building on brownfield land in the greenbelt or repurposing derelict buildings might begin to alleviate the housing crisis, including problems of affordability, for generations to come.
How urban peripheries can work for people and the environment
To combat climate change and tackle the housing crisis, cities need to be allowed to expand with coherent planning – that includes good public transport, well-designed public spaces and high-quality housing.
In Italy, the post-war district of Gallaratese, which lies 7km north-west of the centre of Milan, features medium-scale apartment blocks, good social amenities and high-quality, well-connected public transport. People living there have access to small parks and public gardens, places to sit and shop.
This affords the public realm a certain dignity that is often lacking in in Britain. People benefit from better infrastructure for commuting into the city centres – not just traffic lanes for cars, but metro, tram and train connections, with coherently designed outdoor public space.
In Austria, Seestadt Aspern, a newly developed extension of Vienna, has been characterised as a “city within a city.” It is compact, yet full of public spaces. The project is conceived with job creation, housing and metro-line extension as priorities.
Our research suggests introducing, to periphery design, the kind of buildings more associated with inner-city design. To date, housing in suburban planning in England has largely revolved around the detached single-family home. This ultra-low density building type uses lots of land and is firmly reliant on fossil-fuel heavy private transport.
Focusing instead on what we have called the urban villa might be an alternative. The urban villa aims for a synthesis between the city apartment and the single-family home. Think, a number of apartments in a freestanding house, no more than five storeys, surrounded by a garden.
Suburban planning that centred on this type of housing – which combines urban density with a connection to green space and the public realm – could create a denser, more attractive and, crucially, more sustainable alternative to the way city outskirts are currently planned.
The housing crisis is inextricable from the climate crisis. The environment is most demonstrably in crisis in urban peripheries. It is where the collapse of a coherent urban order takes place, where big bits of transport infrastructure meet fields and suburbs. It’s often where marginalised communities are pushed.
Ultimately, Cheshire was right. The dual housing and climate crises are exasperated by the failure to resolve the greenbelt argument.
What is built around urban cores is crucial to a truly sustainable and equitable solution – for both people and the environment. But, doing so in a way that is beneficial to both residents and the environment requires a shift in government policy and public imagination.
As more and more people cluster around cities in search of work, or a better balance between home and work life, those areas that are now peripheral will become central. Quite under what conditions they live and work there is a matter that demands urgent attention.
*This article was originally published by The Conversation. Please see here for republishing guidelines.
Architecture and Built Environment encompasses all of our teaching, research and enterprise in Architecture, Interior Architecture, Quantity and Building Surveying, Real Estate and Housing.
Latest News and Features
£1.3m national study launches to evaluate changes to police involvement in mental health crisis responses
A major new research project will examine how changes to police involvement in mental health…
Royal Honour as leading researcher awarded Polar Medal
Professor John Woodward has been awarded The Polar Medal in recognition of his outstanding…
Report calls on the UK banking industry to consider interventions that "design out" economic abuse
Researchers have published the findings of a ground-breaking study which brought together victim-survivors…
Northumbria's ‘Banana Split: Unpeeling a New Energy Source’ project highly commended at prestigious Green Gown Awards
A Northumbria University research project has been highly commended at the 2025 Green Gown…
Northumbria ranked most sustainable university in the North East for fifth consecutive year
Northumbria University has been rated as ‘1st class’ for sustainability and is once again the…
Northumbria expert delivers training to help address victim-blaming language
A Northumbria University academic is leading pioneering training to support police forces across…
Northumbria University launches national AI challenge inviting young people to imagine a hopeful future
Northumbria University has launched the Hopeful Futures AI Challenge, a groundbreaking national…
Student volunteering partnership expands following five years of community impact
Following the success of a Law in the Community project, Northumbria University is expanding…
Upcoming events
Collaborating for Capability: Shaping the Future of Supply Chain Talent
City Campus East, Northumbria University CCE1-403
-
Archives to Action: Historical Evidence for Policy Reform
Virtual Workshop
-
Viruses of Microbes-UK (VoM-UK) Conference 2026
Northumbria University
