Place

Infrastructure can improve the economic prospects of local areas and help to enhance the distinct identities of the places where we live, work, and enjoy life.

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Summary

The Commission adopts a place based approach to its thinking, reflecting the results of social research which showed 8 in 10 people believe good infrastructure is necessary to support a good quality of life.

The Commission adopts a place-based approach to its thinking, reflecting the results of social research which showed 8 in 10 people believe good infrastructure is necessary to support a good quality of life.
Infrastructure helps form the identity of places as well as creating efficient links between them. Better transport infrastructure can alleviate bottlenecks to growth in congested areas and improve connectivity, while infrastructure improvements also have the potential, alongside other policies such as skills training, to increase growth in lower productivity areas and help efforts to level up the economy.
Our towns study, for example, found that transport and digital infrastructure in particularly have an important role in supporting economic growth & better quality of life in towns and cities; while our 2022 Getting cities moving report identified the need to get more people making more trips into and around city centres to boost growth in English cities outside of London, without adding to congestion or undermining existing net zero objectives.
These reports informed many of the recommendations in the Second National Infrastructure Assessment on supporting growth in all regions of the country. These include:

  • cities adopting flexible strategic transport plans that can adapt to a range of future transport demand scenarios – backed up by £22 billion in long term funding for major transport projects between 2028 and 2045 – to get more people making more trips into and around city centres
  • to support this, government should make this long term funding for major projects conditional on the introduction of demand management schemes, to be designed to work best in a city’s local context
  • devolving power to local authorities responsible for strategic transport, to allow them to plan for the long term
  • ensuring gigabit capable connectivity is available nationwide by 2030, along with accelerating the deployment of 5G technology.

While the Commission’s remit does not include housing provision, we have advised government on how utility services can better support proposed housing developments and help enable the scale of house building needed to accommodate a growing population.

Data on place

A range of data sets relating to the theme of place is available to review on our Data pages. This includes data sets used in Commission reports, as well as historic data sets. Each can be reviewed online or downloaded. 

Review data

Latest Updates

How further powers could help regions to flourish
Sir John Armitt and Julia Prescot in Wolverhampton

How further powers could help regions to flourish

On Tuesday, the Mayors of the West Midlands and Greater Manchester, Andy Street and Andy Burnham, put aside their political allegiances and came together to urge the Government to implement measures proposed in the National Infrastructure Assessment. Citing their shared ambition to deliver a revolution in transport, housing and employment in their respective regions, they...

National and local leadership needed to meet Growth Arc potential
Senate House Cambridge

National and local leadership needed to meet Growth Arc potential

The one million new homes needed in the Growth Arc spanning Cambridge, Milton Keynes and Oxford will not be delivered without continued and concerted Government involvement, the National Infrastructure Commission warned today. Commissioners supported measures announced at the Budget to promote further development of the Growth Arc, which are in line with recommendations made by...

29 Oct 2018 By
Growth Arc’s economic future “can be secured while protecting the environment”
Picture of the rootops across Oxford University

Growth Arc’s economic future “can be secured while protecting the environment”

The economic future of the arc spanning Cambridge, Milton Keynes and Oxford can be secured while retaining the area’s natural beauty – contrary to claims by the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE). In its report published today, the CPRE claims that recommendations put forward by the National Infrastructure Commission for new homes and improved...

25 Oct 2018 By
Enabling work near-complete on ‘vital’ East-West rail link
Mainline railway in Oxfordshire

Enabling work near-complete on ‘vital’ East-West rail link

Enabling works are near completion on a key section of the former “Varsity Line” between Oxford and Cambridge today, reaching a milestone in meeting the National Infrastructure Commission’s recommendations for supporting future economic prosperity across the growth arc. The Commission’s “Partnering for Prosperity” report, published nearly a year ago, highlighted the need to improve both...

4 Oct 2018 By
Roads for the Future Competition
Graphic showing autonomous cars

Roads for the Future Competition

29 Sep 2018
Armitt: new funding welcome – but further devolution needed to boost local transport
A tram in Nottingham

Armitt: new funding welcome – but further devolution needed to boost local transport

Sir John Armitt today welcomed Government plans to invest £840 million in improving transport within 10 city regions across the UK – and urged ministers to go even further by devolving even more powers and funding to local leaders. The chairman of the National Infrastructure Commission said devolved funding for cities was a key recommendation from the...

27 Sep 2018 By
Expressway decision could help boost long-term prosperity of Growth Arc
Senate House Cambridge

Expressway decision could help boost long-term prosperity of Growth Arc

The Government today announced the defined corridor for the Oxford-Cambridge Expressway – as part of wider efforts to meet the long term economic potential of the area identified by the National Infrastructure Commission. Roads Minister Jesse Norman confirmed Corridor B as the preferred choice. It follows publication of the National Infrastructure Commission’s report into maximising the potential of the...

12 Sep 2018 By
Armitt: speech to London Infrastructure Summit
Tower Bridget at night

Armitt: speech to London Infrastructure Summit

Below is the full text of National Infrastructure Commission Chair Sir John Armitt’s keynote speech to the London Infrastructure Summit on 12 September in London. Check against delivery. “The history of our capital’s infrastructure is filled with stories of world-firsts, projects whose working lives have far surpassed original predictions, and feats of design and engineering...

12 Sep 2018 By
Manchester tops traffic congestion league
A traffic jam in Manchester

Manchester tops traffic congestion league

Manchester suffers the worst congestion of anywhere outside London, according to a new league table released today by the National Infrastructure Commission. While the capital still sees more traffic congestion than any other area of the country, Manchester tops the league outside London, with Liverpool second and Birmingham in third place. Rounding off the top...

7 Sep 2018 By
Harnessing the enthusiasm for the future of the Growth Arc
Picture of the rootops across Oxford University

Harnessing the enthusiasm for the future of the Growth Arc

In June, Commissioner Professor Sadie Morgan spoke at the Oxford-Cambridge Corridor economic growth conference in Milton Keynes.  Here, she writes on the enthusiasm and energy there is for the future of the area, and our recommendations for investing in its infrastructure. June’s Economic Growth conference highlighted for me the real excitement and enthusiasm there is...

Improving transport links between and within our cities
Leeds canal basin with flats

Improving transport links between and within our cities

Sir John Armitt writes on the benefits of HS2, the need for Northern Powerhouse Rail and Crossrail 2, and how following recommendations in the National Infrastructure Assessment would mean providing £43billion funding between now and 2040 and extra powers to mayors and city leaders across the country – including those on the HS2 route –...

National Infrastructure Assessment 1
Man among huge solar power plant

National Infrastructure Assessment 1

The National Infrastructure Assessment looks at the United Kingdom’s future economic infrastructure needs up to 2050 and makes key recommendations for how to deliver new transport, low carbon energy and digital networks, how to recycle more and waste less, and how future infrastructure should be paid for.

10 Jul 2018
Ministers must seize the “golden opportunity” to switch to low cost energy
Offshore wind turbines at sea

Ministers must seize the “golden opportunity” to switch to low cost energy

Britain has a “golden opportunity” to switch to greener ways of providing energy to homes and businesses without increasing bills – but only if Ministers act now to make the most of it. That’s a key finding from today’s National Infrastructure Assessment – the first ever for the UK – published by the National Infrastructure...

9 Jul 2018 By
Exhibition opens to showcase ideas for developing the Growth Arc
Concept of a village

Exhibition opens to showcase ideas for developing the Growth Arc

A new exhibition opens today, showcasing the range of ideas put forward to transform the Arc which spans Cambridge, Milton Keynes and Oxford. The Exhibition of Ideas launches at the Transport Systems Catapult in Milton Keynes, and offers residents across the Arc the chance to see for themselves the entries to the National Infrastructure Commission’s...

4 Jul 2018 By
Running out of road: Investing in cycling in Cambridge, Milton Keynes and Oxford
Bicycles at Oxford University

Running out of road: Investing in cycling in Cambridge, Milton Keynes and Oxford

2 Jul 2018

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