Town Planning

Front Cover
H.M. Stationery Office, 1919 - City planning - 19 pages

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Page 6 - Act as respects any land which is in course of development or appears likely to be used for building purposes, with the general object of securing proper sanitary conditions, amenity, and convenience in connection with the laying out and use of the land, and of any neighbouring lands.
Page 6 - Board that a piece of land already built upon, or a piece of land not likely to be used for building purposes...
Page 18 - Interim report on the treatment of exports from the United Kingdom and British overseas possessions and the conservation of the resources of the empire during the transitional period after the war.
Page 7 - land likely to be used for building purposes" shall include any land likely to be used as, or for the purpose of providing, open spaces, roads, streets, parks, pleasure or recreation grounds, or for the purpose of executing any work upon or under the land incidental to a town planning scheme, whether in the nature of a building work or not, and the decision of the Local Government Board, whether land is likely to be used for building purposes or not, shall be final.
Page 4 - With respect to the sufficiency of space about buildings to secure a free circulation of air...
Page 20 - Demobilisation. (10) Labour Conditions and Adult Education, (n) Commercial Forestry. (12) The Re-Settlement of Officers. I. — Army and RAF II. — Navy. (13) Rural Industries. (14) Food Production. (15) Juvenile Employment. (16) Prices during the War and After. (17) Art and Industry. (18) Industrial Councils : The Whitley Scheme.
Page 8 - Any person whose property is injuriously affected by the making of a town planning scheme shall, if he makes a claim for the purpose within the time (if any) limited by the scheme, not being less than three months after the date when notice of the approval of the scheme is published in the manner prescribed by regulations made by the Local Government Board, be entitled to obtain compensation...
Page 20 - ... British engineering. 6. Raw materials and employment. 7. Guide to work and benefits for soldiers and civil war workers (out of print). 8. Resettlement of civil war workers. 9. Naval demobilization. 10. Labor conditions and adult education. 11. Commercial forestry. 12. The resettlement of officials: I. Army and RAF; II. Navy. 13. Rural industries. 14. Food production. 15. Juvenile employment. 16. Prices during the war and after. 17. Art and industry. 18. Industrial councils: The Whitley scheme....
Page 18 - Report of the committee appointed to consider the position of the building industry after the war. (Cd. 9197.) Great Britain.
Page 4 - The mode in which and the materials with which such foundations and sites are to be made, excavated, filled up, prepared and completed for securing stability and for purposes of health...

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