Places for Everyone

E422838

Places for Everyone is a joint development plan for several Greater Manchester districts that sets out long-term strategies for housing, jobs, and sustainable growth in the region.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Places for Everyone canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf joint development plan
spatial development strategy
strategic planning document
appliesToAdministrativeUnit Bolton Council NERFINISHED
Bury Council NERFINISHED
Oldham Council NERFINISHED
Rochdale Borough Council NERFINISHED
Salford City Council NERFINISHED
Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council NERFINISHED
Trafford Council NERFINISHED
Wigan Council NERFINISHED
appliesToRegion Bolton NERFINISHED
Bury NERFINISHED
Greater Manchester NERFINISHED
Oldham NERFINISHED
Rochdale NERFINISHED
Salford NERFINISHED
Tameside NERFINISHED
Trafford NERFINISHED
Wigan NERFINISHED
coordinatedBy Greater Manchester Combined Authority NERFINISHED
country United Kingdom
definesPolicyArea biodiversity net gain
employment sites
flood risk management
green infrastructure
renewable energy
strategic housing sites
town centre regeneration
transport corridors
excludesRegion Manchester NERFINISHED
Stockport NERFINISHED
follows Greater Manchester Spatial Framework NERFINISHED
governingBody Greater Manchester Combined Authority NERFINISHED
hasMainSubject climate change mitigation
economic development
employment land
environmental protection
green belt review
housing
sustainable growth
transport infrastructure
planningHorizon long-term
policyGoal increase housing supply
promote sustainable development
protect and enhance the environment
reduce carbon emissions
support job creation
replaces Greater Manchester Spatial Framework NERFINISHED

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Greater Manchester Spatial Framework (and successors) hasSuccessor Places for Everyone
subject surface form: Greater Manchester Spatial Framework