2025 NPPF and Design and Placemaking Planning Practice Guidance consultations: CLT Network Response

Home K Policy and Campaigning K 2025 NPPF and Design and Placemaking Planning Practice Guidance consultations: CLT Network Response

Feature image: Bridport Cohousing CLT, CLT Network South West member gathering site tour, October 2025

We have now submitted our Network’s response to the English Government’s 2025 National Planning Policy Framework consultation. This calls for policies that support community-led development. We have also convened a response to the government’s connected Design and Placemaking Planning Guidance Consultation, alongside CLTs and allies with placemaking experience and expertise.

The National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) sets out government’s planning policies for England and how these are expected to be applied at the local level. The government published a set of proposed revisions to the NPPF in December 2025, which were open for consultation until 10th March 2026.

CLT Network CEO, Tom Chance, has worked through the consultation and met with government planning officials, housing enablers and held a roundtable to gather CLT Network members’ experiences and thoughts. With this in mind, we have created and submitted a network-wide response to influence the policies that make a huge difference to CLTs on the ground, who are working to develop the quality affordable homes and community places that we all need.

Our previous responses to NPPF consultations have seen the successful introduction of supportive policies for community-led development, including our long lobbied for Community Led Exception Sites and a definition of community-led development. Read more about these wins here.

Here is our final submission to the 2025 NPPF Planning Policy Framework Consultation.

The government also released an adjoining Design and Placemaking Planning Practice Guidance draft for consultation in January 2026. This guidance is intended to support how NPPF policies are applied and outlines the government’s priorities for well-designed places and how planning policies and decisions would support this.

We were encouraged to submit a response by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government’s Head of Architecture, who was keen to hear suggestions to enhance the place of community-led development and stewardship in the guidance.

As part of our submission, we invited our members and community-led development partner organisations with urban design, architecture, planning and placemaking experience to a working group to share their thoughts on the proposed updates. This included thoughts around how community engagement could be better embedded into policy, where community-led projects might be referenced, and examples that normalise the types of design features that community-led projects develop, such as communal space, shared car parking, and mixed use high street regeneration projects.

A big thank you to our working group contributors for bringing their lived and professional expertise: Alan Pontin (Henley CLT), Alexandra Green (Oxfordshire CLT), Charlie Palmer (Incremental), Jeff Bishop, Mark Syrett (Horsted Keynes CLT), Martin Field (East Midlands Community Led Housing), Trevor Cherrett (Wiltshire CLT).

In the future, we will continue to identify and respond to policy opportunities that could support communities to develop the places and homes they need for happy, healthy neighbourhoods. This includes how the proposals we are making for the English planning system in a current consultation could be applied in Wales to create a truly enabling environment for community led development