4/2/2023 0 Comments Blowing tumbleweed gifOn the other there are towns and small cities with good housing stock, an inherited infrastructure of parks and civic buildings and easy access to beautiful countryside, which through their location suffer from underinvestment and depopulation. On the one hand there are overheated residential markets in London, Bristol, Manchester, Edinburgh and elsewhere. Such changes could help to address, without the pouring of any concrete or the laying of a brick, the imbalance in the nation’s housing that was at breaking point before Covid. Those ex-urbanites, still valuing social contact and public life, might seek towns and small cities rather than a lonely cottage in a field. If the magic spell of the big city, which kept people in the tiny and expensive flats that now look so inadequate, is broken, then you might consider living in cheaper, more relaxed locations that hadn’t occurred to you before. If you no longer have to go to an office daily, you can live further from the city in which it is placed. These decisions might be based on life changes, such as having children. There will always be millions who want to live in cities and millions who want to live in towns and villages, but there are also those for whom these are borderline decisions, with pros and cons on each side. These changes do not add up to the abandonment of big cities and offices predicted by more excitable commentaries, not a future of rural bubbles and of tumbleweed blowing through the City of London, but a welcome shift in priorities.
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