Draft:Secured By Design


Secured By Design (SBD) is a police initiative in the UK that advises on the construction of buildings and larger development schemes to encourage the adoption of techniques or designs that are thought to discourage crime. It incorporates training police officers as Designing Out Crime Officers, who are referred to in the National Planning Policy Framework,[1] giving the initiative wide influence over British construction.

Principles edit

Secured By Design was created in 1989 as a response to perceived failings of the estates built in the UK's postwar era, with two focuses: the vulnerability of certain construction methods, such as doors or glazing that were considered easy for burglars to bypass; and the wider design of housing estates or urban areas, which often incorporated pedestrian routes that were thought to create escape routes for criminals.[2]

In the modern day, Secured By Design has developed into a wide set of standards and design approaches, including on road and footpath layouts, lighting, street furniture, public or communal spaces (like parks and playgrounds), fencing, planting, building positioning, and the materials used in construction.[3]

Urbanist Adam Greenfield argues that Secured By Design is based on the principles of Defensible Space, developed in the 1970s by architect Oscar Newman.[4]

Criticism edit

Some urbanists and planners have criticised the power the police have over construction and public spaces. Urbanist Phineas Harper described the impact of the scheme as "rooted in systemic prejudices rather than community-centred design principles" and noted Secured By Design's promotion of cul-de-sacs,[5] which have been increasingly criticised by urban planners for encouraging sprawl and unsustainable living.[6]

Architect Russell Curtis criticised the scheme's standards as "diametrically opposed to good placemaking", citing examples of his practice where Designing Out Crime Officers had called for public areas to be gated off and arguing that they had too much influence over local authority planners.[4]

Secured By Design has also been criticised for the removal of street furniture and planting, including a flower walkway in Southwark that was said to be blocking CCTV sight lines,[7] benches and shrubs in parks in Ashford,[8] and foot and bike paths in Horsham.[9]

However, the UK police have defended Secured By Design's principles, with Jon Cole, the COO of Police Crime Prevention Initiatives (the police-owned organisation that develops Secured By Design) arguing that criticisms are based on misconceptions of the scheme, that cul-de-sacs are self-policing, and that overall "there is sometimes a little bit of inconvenience, but one which buys enormous amounts of safety."[4]




References edit

  1. ^ "Secured by Design - About SBD". www.securedbydesign.com. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  2. ^ "Secured by Design - About SBD". www.securedbydesign.com. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  3. ^ Secured By Design: Homes 2023 (PDF), 2023
  4. ^ a b c "Can we design away crime?". ww3.rics.org. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  5. ^ Harper, Phineas (2024-03-13). "Comment: 'the Metropolitan Police shouldn't get a say in designing London's streets'". Evening Standard. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  6. ^ Hart, Kim (March 2020). "Why city planners are killing the cul-de-sac". Axios. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  7. ^ Russell, Herbie (22 September 2023). "Southwark Council destroys Walworth flower walkway in ongoing anti-social behaviour crackdown". Southwark News. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  8. ^ "Controversy after police remove benches and bushes". Kent Online. 2022-04-22. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  9. ^ Harper, Phineas (2022-05-02). "Removing benches, blocking cycle paths: why are police interfering in the UK's public spaces?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-03-15.