Community Plan of William Dunbar and William Saville Houses
Community Plan of William Dunbar and William Saville Houses

Community Plan of William Dunbar and William Saville Houses, South Kilburn

Title of the project
Civic Design Exchange: Co-designing neighbourhoods with communities

Principal Investigator and project coordinator
Dr Pablo Sendra

Team
Cecilia Colombo, Alice Devenyns, Irene Manzini Ceinar

Quantity Surveyor
Simon Morrow, SJ Morrow Ltd

In collaboration with
Residents Association

In partnership with
Granville Community Kitchen. Leslie Barson

Funded by
Research England’s Higher Education Innovation Fund, managed by UCL Innovation & Enterprise

Between October 2019 and May 2020, the UCL Civic Exchange team carried out the knowledge exchange project ‘Civic Design Exchange: Co-designing Neighbourhoods with Communities’. This project was carried out in partnership with Granville Community Kitchen, which acted as a link between UCL researchers and the residents from two tower block in a North-West London council estate.

The estate is going through a major a regeneration scheme that involves a phased demolition and redevelopment of the whole estate. In the first masterplan that came out in 2005, these two blocks were planned to be refurbished, not demolished. In 2016, a new Master­plan Review was published, which included the demolition and redevelopment of these two blocks. When residents found out that their homes will be demolished at the end of 2016, this came as a great shock to some of the residents. The Masterplan Review 2016 proposes to demolish the two buildings, as well as other constructions on the site, and to build a new development with 213 new homes – 176 (83%) market and 37 (17%) affordable – and commercial units on the ground floor.

Aims of the Knowledge Exchange Project

  • Through the workshops and other research methods, co-produce with residents an assessment of the impact the demolition and redevelopment of the buildings will have on the current residents.
  • Through community engagement activities and workshops, as well as a survey, understand which are the main priorities for William Dunbar and William Saville houses’ residents in the regeneration of the estate, and co-produce with them a community vision for the future of their neighbourhood. In this document, we refer to this vision as the Community Plan.
  • Study and assess to what extent the Community Plan meets the objectives outlined in the Masterplan Review.
  • Study and assess the feasibility of the Community Plan.
  • Exchange knowledge between communities and universities. This knowledge exchange happens in two directions:
    • Communities learning about planning: through the workshops, residents increase their knowledge and awareness of planning, and reflect on their relationship with the neighbourhood.
    • University researchers learning from communities: Communities possess a very important local knowledge. Through the workshops, the researchers learn about the experience of living in the neighbourhood and about which are the best tools to engage with communities.