London Landscape Plans: 1829, 1900, 1929, 1943, 1951, 1969, 1976, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2000, 2004, London landscape architecture,
The great 1944 ‘Abercrombie’ open space plan for London was founded on three concepts: Open Space Standards, a Green Belt, and a Park System. Open Space Standards per 1000 population, which were the dominant idea until 1976, led to standardised parks, planned on a quantitative basis. The Green Belt commanded wide respect throughout the period, primarily, and regrettably, as a’ belt of land which is protected against building development. The Park System idea was highly regarded by Abercrombie, but received scant attention in official documents from 1951 to 1976. It has resurfaced in the form of Green Chains. Sinceâ€1.1990; with impetus from LPAC, there have been proposals for the adoption of.a Green Strategy, for revising the GLDP hierarchy, and for a qualitative approach to park planning. The boroughs must coordinate their terminology and their efforts. Standardised parks should give way to innumerable areas of special character and special function, linked by a green web, to form a second public realm of high- quality ‘green’ space, owned and managed by a wider variety of agencies than at present.