Tuesday 6 September 2016

9,300 People Live In Every Square Mile of Haywards Heath – Is Haywards Heath Over Crowded?



Haywards Heath is already in the clutches of a population crisis that has now started to affect the quality of life of those living in Haywards Heath. There are simply not enough homes in Haywards Heath to house the greater number of people wanting to live in the town.

To start with, the UK has roughly 1,065 people per square mile – the second highest in Europe. The total area of Haywards Heath itself is 3.612 square miles and there are 33,800 Haywards Heath residents, meaning, 9,300 people live in each square mile of Haywards Heath, it’s no wonder we appear to be bursting at the seams!


A square mile is enormous, so the numbers look correspondingly large. Most people reading this will know what an ‘acre’ is, but those younger readers who don’t, it is an imperial unit of measurement for land and it is approximately 63 meters square.

In Haywards Heath, only 13.35 people live in every acre of Haywards Heath, not as headline grabbing, but a lot closer to home and relative to everyday life, and if I am being honest, a figure that doesn’t seem that bad.

Yet, the issue at hand is, we need more homes building. In 2007, Tony Blair set a target that 240,000 homes a year needed to be built to keep up with the population growth, whilst the Tory’s new target since 2010 was a more modest 200,000 a year. However, since 2010, as a country, we have only been building between 140,000 and 150,000 houses a year. So where are we going to build these homes? It would seem we have no space! Or do we?

Well, let me tell you this fascinating piece of information I found out recently in an official Government report. Looking specifically at England (as it is the most densely populated country of the Union), all the 20 million English homes cover only 1.1% of its land mass. That is not a typo, only one point one per cent (1.1%) of land in England is covered by residential property. In more detail, of all the land in the Country -

·         Residential Houses and Flats 1.1%
·         Gardens 4.3%
·         Shops and Offices 0.7%
·         Highways (Roads and Paths) 2.3%
·         Railways 0.1%
·         Water (Rivers /Reservoirs) 2.6%
Industry, Military and other uses 1.4%



This leaves 88.5% as Open Countryside (and if you think about it add to that the gardens, which are green spaces, and the country is 92.8% greenspace).

As a country, we have plenty of space to build more homes for the younger generation and the five million more homes needed in the next 20 years would use only 0.25% of the country’s land. Now I am not advocating building massive housing estates and 20 storey concrete and glass behemoth apartment blocks next to local beauty spots such as Nymans Gardens or Wakehurst Place, but with some clever planning and joined up thinking, we really do need to think outside the box when it comes to how we are going to build and house our children and our children’s children in the coming 50 years in Haywards Heath.



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