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Council & democracy
The borough
Greenwich profile
Regeneration
Key regeneration achievements
Recession
Income
Deprivation
Future regeneration work
Greenwich is a borough of contrasts. It’s both a major tourist destination with World Heritage Site status, and a borough with pockets of extreme deprivation.
To combat the decline in certain areas the Council created local partnerships to link the Council, local community and businesses. The Council also developed strategies to foster an integrated approach to the regeneration of the borough.
Physical development of land and new transport networks has spearheaded the regeneration of Greenwich. The overall strategy seeks to maximise benefits for residents by improving:
skills
income
housing
health
and the environment.
Key regeneration achievements
Regeneration of key sites.
23,000 new homes between 2003 and 2016.
Major improvements to housing estates.
Created over 2,900 new jobs from 2002 to 2005.
Reduced unemployment to within 1% of the London average.
Eight new business parks.
New transport links: extension of Docklands Light Rail to Greenwich and Woolwich, two new stations, new piers and the extension of the Jubilee Line.
New health and education facilities.
The Council has been awarded Beacon Council status for its work in removing barriers to work, for sustainable tourism, and the provision of affordable housing.
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Recession
The years of recession were characterised by high unemployment and severe deprivation. Statistics include:
10,000 jobs lost between 1991 and 1993
Less than 6,000 manufacturing jobs left
Male unemployment up to 60 per cent
80 per cent of Council housing stock in need of repair
Fear of crime and violence
1,100 acres of land in the borough was contaminated
Greenwich experienced the worst health inequality in London
Educational achievements were some of the lowest in the country
The regeneration process aims to address these issues, making Greenwich a place where people want to live, work, learn and visit.
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Income
Greenwich families earn on average £26,000 per household (2002 figures). This places Greenwich among the 10 boroughs in London with the lowest average incomes. Strong disparities in income exist across the borough, often between adjacent Wards. For example, in Palace and St Mary’s, over 37 per cent of households earn less than £10,000, whereas this figure falls to 10 per cent for Deansfield and Blackheath Wards.
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Deprivation
Using the Government’s measure of deprivation, the Index of Deprivation 2004, Greenwich is the 41st most deprived borough in England and Wales.
Sub-ward areas – Super Output Areas – are used in the identification of deprivation.
Wards with areas in the 10% most deprived in England are:
Abbey Wood
Charlton
Eltham West
Glyndon
Greenwich West
Middle Park and Sutcliffe
Peninsula
Thamesmead Moorings
Woolwich Common
Woolwich Riverside
This shows a concentration of deprivation along the waterfront Wards, but with significant concentrations further south.
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Future regeneration work
The economic decline of past decades has been halted and the borough now has a new identity. Greenwich is now entering a new phase and the challenge is to build upon our achievements.
Greenwich is still a borough of contrasts. Future regeneration work will aim to help improve:
areas in Greenwich where there are local concentrations of relative deprivation
some housing estates that remain in need of repair
transport in some areas of the borough where it is inadequate
employment: while unemployment is falling, it remains higher than the London average
serious health inequalities within the borough.
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For further information
For more details on the regeneration projects across the borough, go to Your environment >
Regeneration and renewal
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