• home
  • directory
  • royal town planning institute
  • Royal Town Planning Institute

    Royal Town Planning Institute logo

    41-42 Botolph Lane
    41 Botolph Lane London, EC3R 8DL
    London
    EC3R 8DL

    020 7929 9494

    Profile:

    About the RTPI

    The Royal Town Planning Institute is the UK's leading planning body for spatial, sustainable and inclusive planning and is the largest planning institute in Europe with over 23,000 members.

    Supporting our members throughout their professional careers is at the heart of everything we do. Trudi Elliott, RTPI Chief Executive

    The RTPI is:

    • A membership organisation and a Chartered Institute responsible for maintaining professional standards and accrediting world class planning courses nationally and internationally.
    • A charity whose charitable purpose is to advance the science and art of planning (including town and country and spatial planning) for the benefit of the public.
    • A learned society.


    We also run Planning Aid England and have a trading company, RTPI Services Limited. Our campaigning activity covers a wide range of issues, helping to raise the profile of the profession and generate awareness of the invaluable contribution planners make to building sustainable communities and helping to drive economic wealth. We work in partnership with employers to promote the professional development of planning professionals.

    Our membership


    As at April 2014 RTPI membership was as follows:

    • 23,000 members
    • 8,000 women and 15,000 men
    • International 1,300 members in 82 countries
    • Scotland 2,100 members
    • Wales 1,100 members
    • Northern Ireland 520 members
    • Ireland 200 members

    Our history


    The term town planning was first used in Britain in 1906. The statutory practice of town planning stemmed from the Housing, Town Planning, etc Act 1909, which permitted local authorities under the close supervision of the Local Government Board to prepare such schemes for land in course of development, or likely to be developed. The schemes were particularly appropriate for suburban areas, where they regulated both the layout of land and the density of development, and reserved land for new highways. At this time town planning had not established itself as an art or science, but practitioners in the activity were increasing in number rapidly. Many found it convenient to see their work as distinctive within a number of professions which came to engage in this area - architecture, surveying, municipal engineering and the law. At first these four professions sought to work collaboratively; however, Thomas Adams played a leading part in discussions that went beyond mere co-operation from 1910 onwards. In that year Adams was appointed the first Town Planning Inspector at the Local Government Board; he then began to meet regularly with a small group of practitioners, and the notion of town planning being an area of distinctive expertise took hold. On 11 July 1913 a provisional committee of the group was set up at a meeting in London. A membership list was drawn up, derived not only from the professions, but also amateurs interested in but not directly associated with the subject. An invitation was sent to them to join a Town Planning Institute and a first meeting was convened, chaired by Thomas Adams on 21 November 1913. A Council was elected and met for the first time in December; Adams was elected President on 13 March 1914. An inaugural dinner on 30 January 1914 marked the public launching of the Institute, and the Articles of Association were signed on 4 September 1914, which is designated the date of the Institute's founding. The first three of the objects for which the Institute was established in the Articles of Association read as follows:

    • To advance the study of town-planning, civic design and kindred subjects, and of the arts and sciences as applied to those subjects;
    • To promote the artistic and scientific development of towns and cities;
    • To secure the association, and to promote the general interests of those engaged or interested in the practice of town-planning.

    Alfred R Potter was appointed the Institute's first Secretary on 18 December 1914; the Institute's first London office was at 4 Arundel Street, near Temple.

    Listed under:

    Planning permission - products & services , Planning permission - courses

    There’s a crash coming – a slap from Mother Nature. This isn’t pessimistic; it’s realistic.

    The human impact on nature and on each other is accelerating and needs systemic change to reverse.

    We’re not advocating poverty, or a hair-shirt existence. We advocate changes that will mean better lives for almost everyone.

    Sign up to our newsletter

    Facebook icon Twitter icon Youtube icon

    All rights reserved © lowimpact 2023