About
The Bartlett Development Planning Unit delivers world‑leading research, advisory services, and teaching that advance transformative development planning for social and environmental justice.
The Development Planning Unit (DPU) conducts world-leading research, advisory services, and postgraduate teaching. We work with strategic actors, collectives, and institutions to advance socially, environmentally, and spatially just development trajectories at local, national and regional scales. Central to this project is a commitment to questioning whose voices count when it comes to development planning.
We believe in a world in which everyone is able to choose, plan and manage their own lives and communities, with support from democratic and accountable institutions. For us, transformative development planning means identifying, and addressing, inequalities in social, political and economic participation that have been built around gender, class, race, age, disability, sexuality, migrant status, and other social constructions. It also means promoting governance and planning processes that work with intersecting formal and informal conditions, address colonialism and its ongoing legacies, and produce inclusive citizenship arrangements to respond effectively to the compounding crises of climate change, displacement, violence, authoritarianism and market-capture.
To this end, our mission is to learn with, support, and challenge, communities, professionals and institutions to co-produce innovative, sustainable, just and inclusive development strategies.
We want to amplify the voices and knowledge of people who are generally excluded from decision-making, supporting their role in shaping just and sustainable development trajectories for themselves and others. To do this, we design and deliver research, teaching and practice to:
- Nurture a new generation of reflexive practitioners, with the capacity to challenge orthodox development agendas, and rediscover the transformative potential of development planning;
- Explore, or revive, innovative, participatory, and inclusive approaches to development planning, that challenge structural inequalities and promote plural understandings of development.
- Facilitate alliance-building across diverse networks of actors, collectives and institutions, to foster partnerships with equivalence, working to advance social, environmental, economic, and spatial justice in human settlements.
We undertake outreach and consultancy with a range of partners who support our mission.
We place a strong emphasis on understanding local contexts and regularly interacting with policy and planning practitioners.
Collaborations
We are proud to have a have a long history of working with institutions whose values and concerns resonate with our own vision and mission.
Collaborations are central to our core teaching, research and TAS activities, and they’ve helped us built strong relationships and pioneer new approaches to development practice around the world.
Training and Advisory Services (TAS)
Training and Advisory Services (TAS) are as much a part of our institutional identity as our teaching and research activities, having begun in the 1970s. In many ways these constitute a significant part of the the 'non-academic' side of our work, which is fully embedded in development practice.
TAS activities take place in:
- Knowledge and research co-production
- Methodology development
- Policy analysis and development
- Institutional capacity building, including training and strategy development
In 1953, a conference was held at UCL on architecture and planning in the tropical developing countries of the Global South.
The Architectural Association School of Architecture in London then launched an annual 6-month Postgraduate Diploma course in tropical architecture. It was first led by Maxwell Fry and then Otto Koenigsberger.
Over the following decade the Diploma course developed in response to the rapidly changing scene in the Global South. To reflect this, the Department changed its name to Development and Tropical Studies in 1968 and in 1969 the Diploma in Urban Development Planning was launched.
In 1971, it moved to UCL, changing its name to The Development Planning Unit (DPU) and Koenigsberger became the first University of London Professor of Urban Development.
The Post Graduate Diploma in Urban Development Planning became its flagship programme, attracting mid-career professionals from different parts of the world.
A highly successful programme of specialist professional short courses in a range of urban development issues was run throughout the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s.
In 1980 the DPU launched the Masters Degree course in Urban Development Planning, which ran alongside the postgraduate Diploma course and the specialist programmes throughout the 1980s and early 1990s.
The PhD programme took off in the mid-1980s and the Unit’s applied research and consultancy activities have grown consistently.
The 1990s saw an expansion in the MSc programmes offered by the DPU, starting In 1993 with the launch of two new MSc programmes that became known as the MSc in Urban Economic Development and the MSc in Building and Urban Design in Development. This was followed in 1995 by a new MSc in Development Administration and Planning, in 1997 by what became known as the MSc Environment and Sustainable Development, and in 1999 by an MSc in Social Development Practice. From the end of the 1990s, the DPU’s research programme grows rapidly into the trans-disciplinary portfolio of research is carries out today. 60 years after its first postgraduate course, the DPU is one of the world’s leading institutions in urban and regional development planning, urban design, the city economy, social development practice, gender in policy and planning, and environment and sustainable development.
Founder of the DPU
Otto Koenigsberger was one of the founders of modern urban development planning in the rapidly growing cities of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East.
He was a polymath, whose contributions ranged from building physics and design in tropical climates to the formulation of self-help policies for the improvement of urban slums; from the planning and building of new towns to the development of national urban policies in the context of rapid growth and change; from advising on professional and technical training to the establishment of university institutions.
Above all, he was a teacher.
To commemorate our Anniversary we revisited some of the people, places and moments that have made the DPU what it is today, and explored future challenges for urban development planning and education.
View more on the DPU60 page.
Celebrating 70 years | 1954-2024
Look back on how we celebrated our 70th anniversary.
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34 Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9EZ, United Kingdom
The nearest public transport stations are:
Euston (for Victoria; and Northern Underground Lines; and British Rail).
Russell Square (for Piccadilly Line).
Euston Square (for Circle, Metropolitan, and Hammersmith & City Lines).
A disabled access guide for the building is available here: https://www.disabledgo.com/access-guide/ucl/tavistock-square-34
The Bartlett Development Planning Unit
Click to email. dpu@ucl.ac.uk Click to call. +44 (20) 7679 1111