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

Shortlist announced in ‘Growth Corridor’ ideas competition

Shortlist announced in ‘Growth Corridor’ ideas competition

The National Infrastructure Commission today confirmed the shortlist for The Cambridge to Oxford Connection: Ideas Competition. This two-stage competition is seeking inspirational yet realisable visions for the future of development within the arc encompassing four of the UK’s fastest-growing and most productive centres: Cambridge, Milton Keynes, Northampton and Oxford. The free-to-enter competition invited entries from...

22 Aug 2017 By
Adonis: London cycling adviser to help make Growth Corridor ‘world class’ for cyclists
Bicycles at Oxford University

Adonis: London cycling adviser to help make Growth Corridor ‘world class’ for cyclists

Cambridge, Milton Keynes and Oxford could be transformed into world-class places for cycling, Chairman of the National Infrastructure Commission Lord Adonis said today. He has tasked Andrew Gilligan, former Cycling Commissioner for London, to work with local councils and local organisations to create a vision of what is required for cycling to become a “super...

27 Jul 2017 By
Supporting a competitive Growth Corridor
Sadie Morgan

Supporting a competitive Growth Corridor

From Cambridge in the East to Oxford in the West, the Growth Corridor represents a world-class concentration of talent – whether on globally-renowned university campuses or in the flourishing science and technology industries. Collectively the area is one of the most economically successful in the country, and by 2050 could help generate as many as...

Help shape the future of the UK’s ‘Growth Corridor’
Ariel view of a city with people and buses

Help shape the future of the UK’s ‘Growth Corridor’

Residents in the Cambridge, Milton Keynes, Northampton and Oxford Growth Corridor have the chance to create a vision for the future of their area, through a new competition launched today. The four cities collectively make up the ‘Growth Corridor’ – as one of the most economically successful parts of the country outside London, the Corridor...

30 Jun 2017 By
Data submitted by the 6 Local Enterprise Partnerships along the corridor
Bridge in Bedford

Data submitted by the 6 Local Enterprise Partnerships along the corridor

Part of the supporting evidence which informed the Partnering for Prosperity report.

14 Jun 2017
CAMKOX Corridor data
Senate House Cambridge

CAMKOX Corridor data

Data on population, skills, jobs, housing and 'gross value added', in the Cambridge-Oxford-Milton Keynes corridor.

14 Jun 2017
Property market analysis for the CaMKOx arc
Modern British housing

Property market analysis for the CaMKOx arc

A report reviewing the residential and commercial property markets within the Cambridge, Milton Keynes, Oxford and Northampton corridor.

20 Mar 2017
Transport analysis for the Cambridge – Milton Keynes – Oxford Corridor
Ariel view of a city with people and buses

Transport analysis for the Cambridge – Milton Keynes – Oxford Corridor

Research investigating transportation infrastructure and its interaction with housing, finance and economic activity across the Cambridge–Milton Keynes–Oxford corridor.

20 Mar 2017
Funding and investment analysis for the CaMKOx arc
Sun setting with atmospheric effect over traditional British houses and tree lined streets.

Funding and investment analysis for the CaMKOx arc

A report assessing public funding trends and the potential to attract additional investment into the Cambridge-Milton Keynes-Oxford Corridor.

20 Mar 2017
Economic analysis growth corridor
A building at Silverstone

Economic analysis growth corridor

Research on the economic rationale for infrastructure investment in the Cambridge, Oxford, Milton Keynes arc, part of the evidence base for the report Partnering for Prosperity.

20 Mar 2017
Strategic planning and governance in the Cambridge – Milton Keynes – Oxford corridor: discussion paper
Ariel view of a city with people and buses

Strategic planning and governance in the Cambridge – Milton Keynes – Oxford corridor: discussion paper

13 Mar 2017
Economic growth and demand for infrastructure services
Blurred crowd in train station

Economic growth and demand for infrastructure services

A paper focused on economic growth, forming part of a series looking at the drivers of future infrastructure supply and demand in the UK.

3 Mar 2017
National Infrastructure Commission Autumn Statement Response: Government acceptance of NIC recommendations most welcome – Armitt

National Infrastructure Commission Autumn Statement Response: Government acceptance of NIC recommendations most welcome – Armitt

The Autumn Statement, Wednesday 23 November 2016, saw the Chancellor announce that: The government accepts the NIC’s recommendations to fund the next phase of East West Rail and the Oxford-Cambridge Expressway The next NIC study will focus on how emerging technologies can improve infrastructure productivity The government has set the NIC’s fiscal remit between 1%...

23 Nov 2016 By
Cambridge – Milton Keynes – Oxford corridor interim report
Bridge in Cambridge

Cambridge – Milton Keynes – Oxford corridor interim report

16 Nov 2016
New East-West transport links could provide a once in a generation opportunity for ‘Britain’s Silicon Valley’ – Armitt
Ariel view of a city with people and buses

New East-West transport links could provide a once in a generation opportunity for ‘Britain’s Silicon Valley’ – Armitt

In March 2016, the National Infrastructure Commission was asked to consider how to maximise the potential of the Cambridge- Milton Keynes- Oxford corridor as a single, knowledge-intensive cluster that competes on a global stage, protecting the area’s high quality environment, and securing the homes and jobs that the area needs. Today, Wednesday 16 November, the...

16 Nov 2016 By

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