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Economic Development

Plans for 165,000 homes across Greater Manchester will face public hearing later this year

Places for Everyone plan will form the city region’s strategy for housing, jobs and the environment until 2037

The Places for Everyone plan covers nine Greater Manchester boroughs (Image: Manchester Evening News)

Public hearings will be held into a masterplan detailing where 165,000 homes will be built across Greater Manchester over the next 15 years - as opponents prepare to fight proposals to build on green belt land.

The Places for Everyone plan – the city-region’s strategy for housing, jobs and the environment until 2037 – will undergo a public examination later this year. Public hearings will be held over five months starting from November, to scrutinise the plan, and hundreds of campaigners will be invited.

The plan has been repeatedly revised since its inception as the Greater Manchester Spatial Framework (GMSF). The latest delay triggered by Stockport’s decision to pull out in December 2020.

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The renamed plan, which was submitted to the government this year, concerns the remaining nine boroughs – Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Stockport, Tameside, Trafford and Wigan.

More than 15,000 comments were received in the latest public consultation on the controversial masterplan. Some proposed developments in the previous plans have been scaled down while others have been removed, resulting in a 60% reduction in green belt land which would be built on compared with the first GMSF published in 2016.

Some 50,000 of the 165,000 homes now planned under Places for Everyone would be affordable with 30,000 of them to be social housing.

More than 55m sq ft of office, industrial and warehousing space is also proposed across the nine boroughs – including some on green belt land.