Ads
related to: newcastle planning website site
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
School of Architecture, Newcastle University. Newcastle University School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape is based in Newcastle upon Tyne, England.Housed in a Grade 2 listed building in the university quadrangle (built in 1913 to a design by WH Knowles [1] [2] and adjacent to the School of Fine Art by the same architect).
Following a period working for Surrey County Council, he moved to Newcastle upon Tyne City Council as its chief planning officer in 1960. [1] At Newcastle, he took charge of a newly created department—one of the first planning departments in the country—and worked closely with the city council's political leader, T. Dan Smith.
Patsy Healey OBE FBA FAcSS (née Ingold; 1 January 1940 – 7 March 2024) was a British urban planner. [1] She was professor emeritus at Global Urban Research Unit in the School of Architecture, Planning & Landscape, at Newcastle University. [2]
with Haggett, C. (2004), Tilting at Windmills, Town and Country Planning, October, 73 (10), pp288–290. (2004), Researching Wind Energy Developments: Perspectives from Planning Theory, Working Paper for ESRC Tilting at Windmills project, Newcastle University: Newcastle.
Simin Davoudi FAcSS is Professor of Environmental Policy and Planning at Newcastle University.She is Past President of the Association of European Schools of Planning and, as coordinator of the Planning Research Network, advised the Department of Communities and Local Government on its research priorities until 2007.
Graham graduated from Southampton University in 1986 with a Geography BSc. Between 1987 and 1989 he completed an M.Phil. in Urban Planning at Newcastle University.Moving into the professional world of urban policy and planning, he worked in spatial planning and local economic policy at Sheffield City Council between 1989 and 1992.
Newcastle City Council granted planning permission in 2017 for an 82-metre-tall (269 ft) residential block to be called Hadrian's Tower on Rutherford Street in Newcastle city centre, [2] which became the new tallest on its completion in 2020.
Between 2002 and 2007, he remained Professor of European Planning and Development at the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. He also led the research themes on Regeneration, Social Innovation and Inclusion at Global Urban Research Unit. Additionally, he held the positions of: