Neighbourhood Boards
Neighbourhood Boards are one of the elements of the ten year UK Pride in Place Programme and described in the Pride in Place Programme prospectus as serving as the cornerstone of the Programme. Each Neighbourhood Board will be chaired independently and supported by local MPs and authorities.
Pride in Place being a Labour Government initiative (with a number of elements from the previous Conservative government under a different name) that was officially announced in September 25, 2025 with the Pride in Place strategy publication, describing the governments intention support some of the most deprived areas of the country by allocating them a share of £5 billion or around £20 million of funding for each of the selected areas for long-term improvements over the next 10 years.
Neighbourhood Boards will responsible for representing the diverse community voices and co-creating the decade-long plan. Membership is expected to include residents, grass roots activists, local businesses, cultural and sports organisations, and anchor institutions such as schools or healthcare providers, ensuring that boards reflect the community they serve.
Boards must maintain a majority of residents over elected representatives and actively engage traditionally under-represented groups, such as those facing socioeconomic, linguistic, or accessibility barriers. Extensive, ongoing community engagement is central, including workshops, listening campaigns, participatory budgeting, and forums that enable residents to influence decisions meaningfully.
Boards are also encouraged to innovate, delegating deliveryresponsibilities to local community organisations where appropriate, and to use participatory approaches to foster long-term ownership and accountability. Neighbourhood Boards will be further supported by Network for Neighbourhoods to promotes sharing of best practices across communities. The aims of this being to reduce reliance on external consultants and build local capacity, ensuring skills and knowledge endure beyond ten years, enabling Boards to use flexible funding, training, and technical support to leverage public, private, and philanthropic investment for sustainable regeneration.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Adverse possession.
- Architecture of Christiania.
- Breach of condition notice.
- City deals.
- Collaboration needed to deliver national and regional transport strategies.
- Community.
- Community Infrastructure Levy.
- Community right to bid.
- Community right to build.
- Community right to reclaim land.
- Community rights.
- Devolution.
- Devolution and development.
- Empty dwelling management orders.
- Empty housing in London - documentary.
- Excluded occupier.
- Housing tenure.
- How to evict a tenant.
- IHBC articles.
- Land registry.
- Local development order.
- Local Enterprise Partnerships.
- Local government.
- Local resident.
- Localism Act.
- National Planning Policy Framework.
- Neighbourhood planning.
- Neighbourhood development order.
- Network for Neighbourhoods.
- Permitted development.
- Place-shaping: a shared ambition for the future of local government.
- Planning Act 2008.
- Planning legislation.
- Pride in Place Programme prospectus.
- Property guardianship.
- Rating (Property in Common Occupation) and Council Tax (Empty Dwellings) Bill.
- Repurposing Empty Spaces. Addressing the Housing Crisis Across England, Scotland and Wales in 2025.
- Repurposing Empty Spaces a report by Habitat for Humanity.
- Right of entry.
- Right to access land.
- Right to regenerate.
- Self build initiative.
- Social housing.
- Special licences.
- Squatting.
- Tenant management organisation.
- The UK Pride in Place Programme.
- Town and Country Planning (Local Planning) (England) Regulations 2012.
- Village green registration.
Featured articles
Check out some of the best features and news from Designing Buildings as well as key stories from around the web.
New, more proportionate and targeted approach for higher-risk building assessments.
Government brings British Steel into public ownership.
UKCW Birmingham returns with bold new theme and focus.
New guidance published on competence requirements for self-certification schemes.
Construction Management, 8 July
NEETs crisis drives interest in trades, but apprenticeships barriers remain.
Passive fire protection webinar
MEP services penetration seals.
Where its at podcast (and video) - The role of the Architectural Technologist as an Expert Witness.
More than 200 remarkable buildings added to SAVE’s Buildings at Risk register.
Government scraps pre-application consultation for Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects.
Historic England and infrastructure
New projects offer opportunities for the historic environment and local communities.
Construction Management, 2 July
Construction deaths halve in two years.
Green Book changes to drive investment in all parts of UK.

















