Housing Forum chief executive David Crewe has urged the government to start building new towns again as a way of solving the housing crisis.
The proposal comes after calls by the Royal Town Planning Institute for more green-belt land to be freed up for housing.

As part of a ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø survey of construction industry experts on the future of housing, Crewe urged the government to make use of its existing powers to establish new towns.

He told ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø: "ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø new towns is something that the government really can do. There is a new towns act in existence that gives provision for land assembly."

Crewe added that new communities are a good way of creating sustainable developments, providing a wide range of housing and fuelling economic activity.

CABE chairman Sir Stuart Lipton added that London needed a single agency to co-ordinate delivery of housing. He said the government and the mayor should join forces to establish a single housing regeneration agency.

He said: "London needs a plan and it cannot wait until 2004 for the mayor's spatial development framework."

ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø new towns is something that the government can do

David Crewe, chief executive, Housing Forum

He added that London required a development framework that covered all the competing interests involved in housing and identified strategic brownfield housing sites in London and the South-east.

Lipton also urged the construction industry to become more innovative financially, particularly in delivering mixed-use, mixed-tenure schemes.

Last week RTPI president Michael Haslam said cities should be able to expand into the green belt. He said there were tensions between green-belt policy and the government's desire to see more sustainable housing.

He said: "If existing cities are not allowed to expand outwards then developers will have to leapfrog over green-belt land and expand into the next villages and market towns."