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Landscape Institute launch briefing on landscape-led development

Posted: 22nd May 2025

As the UK gears up to deliver 1.5 million new homes in England alone, a critical new evidence-based report from the Landscape Institute, the chartered body for the landscape profession, sets out how taking a landscape-led approach is the only way to lead and deliver healthy, thriving, nature-positive places for people in the future.

  • A new Landscape Institute (LI) briefing report makes the case for landscape-led development as essential to the UK’s sustainable future.
  • Landscape-led development results in many positive outcomes: improving community health, resilience and biodiversity, while creating long-term economic and social value.
  • Professionals across planning, development, and policy are urged to engage chartered landscape architects’ expertise from the outset to meet climate, nature, and housing goals.


The LI’s landmark briefing — Maximising value from built development: A landscape-led approach is essential for people, place and nature. It calls on built environment professionals to rethink how we design, build and maintain communities.

The briefing is a strong call to industry — from strategic landowners to local planning authorities, developers to infrastructure funders — with a clear message: placing landscape at the heart of the planning and build process will unlock long-term value.

“Buildings are just one component of new places” says Carolin Göhler FLI, President of the Landscape Institute. “It is the landscape that determines the long-term desirability, distinctiveness and enduring value of a place.”

Landscape architects, supported by the LI’s Royal Charter, are uniquely trained to work at every scale — from masterplanning to site delivery to management — to ensure that the natural and built environments work in harmony together. The report explains that a landscape-led development approach factors in with landscape expertise right from the beginning, making it a core part of the design process.

As society is faced with overlapping challenges of housing need, biodiversity loss, and climate change, the solution is clear: landscape should be the foundation of resilient, liveable and valuable places.
Click here to read the briefing in full.