J.B. Cullingworth, New Towns for Old: The Problem of Urban Renewal, Fabian Society, 1962.
2.
The studies initiated by the Lower Swansea Valley Project (Director, K. J. Hilton) have covered geography, geology, soil mechanics, traffic and other aspects of civil engineering, botany, micro-biology, hydrology, on the side of the physical and natural sciences. In the human sciences they have covered a study of the economics of the subregion (Susanne Spence) and three studies, human ecology, housing and open space, by the present author. These reports are mimeographed. A book incorporating the main findings of all of them and including proposals for the redevelopment of the valley is in preparation.
3.
This point is well made by Colin Rosser and Christopher Harris in The Family and Social Change: A Study of Kinship in a South Wales Town, Routledge, 1965, Chapter II.
4.
R.D. Worrall, Report on Transportation and Physical Planning in the Lower Swansea Valley , 1963 (mimeograph).
5.
For London by the Milner Holland Committee: Report of the Committee on Housing in Greater London, Cmnd. 2605, 1965. In more national terms by J.B. Cullingworth, English Housing Trends, Occasional Papers on Social Administration, No. 13, 1965; J. Greve, The Housing Problem , Fabian Society, 1961; D.V. Donnison, C. Cockburn, J.B. Cullingworth and D.A. Nevitt, Essays on Housing, Occasional Papers on Social Administration, No. 9, 1964 (especially Nevitt, 'Tax Relief Housing Subsidy').
6.
J.B. Cullingworth, Housing in Transition, Heinemann1963 ; D.V. Donnison et al., op. cit, especially p. 23.
7.
Journal of the Town Planning Institute, May 1965, Vol. 51, No. 5, reports Mr Crossman as saying: 'It is quite easy to plan to destroy everything and put up everything brand new, it is much more difficult to plan urban renewal with the minimum of demolition, to do the maximum of preservation, to mingle the old and new-to preserve and create.'