A GROUP of Scottish students have made waves after working to explore how the concept can be incorporated into rural contexts, using the county as a living laboratory.
The postgraduates from The University of Dundee have are now looking to help develop ’20-minute neighbourhoods’ using a place-based approach to reducing inequality.
The students will also aim to meet net zero carbon emission targets – of which The Scottish Government has backed up in its most recent National Planning Framework.
It is now the national planning policy to promote and facilitate the application of connected, compact neighbourhoods.
This simply means people can meet the majority of their daily needs within a reasonable distance of their home, preferably by active or sustainable transport options.
This is particularly important given the projected growth of Monifieth and its surrounding villages in the coming years.
The brief specifically challenged students to explore how Monifieth and the nearby smaller settlements can work together to produce connected communities.
This included improving links to and from it and exploring how settlements could grow to accommodate demand while accommodating a green infrastructure.
The issues and solutions that students identified included the new planning requirements and the potential for Angus’s rural villages to accommodate new growth to help support existing facilities and services.
The students produced innovative solutions on how to do this whilst taking into account the drive to be Net Zero by 2045, climate change, and impacts on nature within Angus.
Course director Dr Husam AlWaer said: “At their heart, 20-minute neighbourhoods are about inclusivity.
“Our partnership with Angus Council has allowed our students to explore and test the ideas they generated.
“Their focus has been to address the challenge of accommodating growth, particularly of housing and other community facilities, whilst helping to make a great place within a connected community concept.?
“Each group contributed to the research, planning and design capability within a rural context, producing creative content that can explore and address real problems and be used in the preparation of the new Local Development Plan.
“This encouraged students to explore place themes related to rural housing, density, health and wellbeing, connectivity and street design, landscape and identity, local economy, as well as cultural and perceptual aspects.”
Jill Paterson, Chief Planner and Service Leader at Angus Council, said: “The collaboration with the University was key to providing us with new ideas on how to implement many of the new requirements of the Planning (Scotland) Act 2019 and National Planning Framework 4 for the next Local Development Plan.
“It also gave the students practical experience on working on real life planning and placemaking issues that the new Plan will need to address.
“The quality of the students work on these matters was exceptional.”