We look at how bad allotment waiting lists have become in the UK and find out what can be done to help.

By Molly Blair

Published: Wednesday, 03 July 2024 at 11:27 AM


It seems the fight for fair access to green spaces has never been a hotter topic or more crucial for city dwellers. Recently, urban growing spaces have been drumming up lots of media attention. In Bristol, allotmenteers angered by council-proposed changes and price hikes formed the Bristol Allotmenteers Resist group and got many of the suggestions overturned. Meanwhile, on the outskirts of the city, a private company setting up new allotment plots has been met with fierce opposition from locals, who claim the site will damage green-belt land – tensions reached such a height that at one clash in October 2023, the police were called.

But how did allotments, once considered the sleepy past-time of an older generation, become such a contentious issue?

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Aerial view of Homes and Allotments in Highgate with the City of London skyline visible on the horizon – © Getty / Richard Newstead

At their core, allotments are supposed to be an affordable way for people to produce their own food. Allotments as we know them now stem from the Small Holdings and Allotment Act of 1907 and 1908 which placed responsibility on councils to provide allotments if there was a demand for them.

Writer, allotments historian and artist JC Niala, who has a PhD in urban gardening, has strong feelings about the importance of allotments. “Low-cost growing spaces have numerous benefits for individuals as well as their communities,” she says.

“They have been shown to improve physical and mental health, increase local biodiversity and stimulate engaged and active communities. Allotments in particular have repeatedly supported people across Britain during times of national crisis such as the World Wars and COVID-19 pandemic.”

“Allotments in particular have repeatedly supported people across Britain during times of national crisis such as the World Wars and COVID-19 pandemic.”

At their peak, during and just after the First and Second World War efforts and the Dig For Victory campaign, there were over 1 million allotments in the UK. Now, there are an estimated 330,000 allotments in the country, and with the population having increased by almost 30 million since the end of the Second World War, it is no surprise that demand is outstripping supply.

Girl and boy in an allotment
Girl and boy in an allotment – © Getty / Tara Moore

Councils still have a legal responsibility to provide allotment space where it is needed – if six people from different households apply for an allotment together, their council has an obligation under the Allotment Act to find them a space. But with councils under pressure from all angles, and with council land scarce, can this law actually be enforced?

JC says that it can. “During my 36 months of fieldwork, I met people who had managed to start allotment sites by mobilising the 1908 Allotment Act. Their councils had responded and they told me about the transformation that it had brought their local communities. I believe that a key reason that the Act is not well used is because not enough people know about it – so yes, it is worth people banding together.”

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How much demand is there for more allotments?

Last year, JC, in collaboration with two other artists, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner with help from Greenpeace UK found that across England, Scotland and Wales a staggering 174,183 people were on a waiting list for an allotment. Bristol had the longest waiting list, with 7,630 aspiring growers waiting for a spot.

They created an artwork, which was taken to the Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Communities as a visual representation of the data collected. Although unable to secure a meeting about the data they had uncovered, the artists were happy that their work sparked interest in the matter.

An allotment-sized living artwork called The Waiting List is guerilla-planted by Greenpeace UK volunteers at a disused Tesco-owned site in Litherland, just north of Liverpool. – © Greenpeace

“A national conversation was triggered,” says JC, “ including a BBC Politics programme where I featured alongside representatives from both the Conservative and Labour parties. Access to allotments is a rare issue that both parties can agree on.”

See more about the project here: