Wei YangFAcSSFRTPIMCIHT is a Chinese-British town planner and urban designer. She is the founder of Wei Yang & Partners in London. She is a lead figure in researching, promoting and implementing the 21st Century Garden City approach and promoting joined up thinking between different built environment professionals. Yang champions a revival of spirit for a modernised planning profession to tackle the global challenges in a systematic way, and thus to achieve collective wellbeing and fulfilment for all. In September 2019, she was elected as the Royal Town Planning Institute's Vice President for 2020. She will lead the Institute as President in 2021. She is a Board Member of the British Library, an Independent Trustee of the Landscape Institute, and a Board Trustee of Milton Keynes City Discovery Centre.
In 2004, while writing up her PhD thesis, Yang pursued her planning career in Britain in a Milton Keynes based planning practice David Lock Associates. In 2011, she founded Wei Yang & Partners in London, which provides integrated master planning solutions and promotes best practices worldwide. In particular, the practice supports and fosters knowledge transfer between practice and research. In 2011, Yang initiated self-funded research on 21st Century Garden City, which captures the essence of the original Garden City ideas, but adapts them to a more complex, 21st century context, promoting sustainability, tackling climate change and utilising smart technologies. The initiative was well ahead of the UK government's Garden City Proposal in 2014. The research had led to the success of Wei Yang & Partners in winning the Wolfson Economics Finalist Prize in 2014. The competition final submission, New Garden Cities: Visionary, Economically Viable and Popular was referred to in The Lyons Housing Review: Mobilising Across the Nation to Build the Homes our Children Need. In the field of practical work, Wei Yang & Partners have delivered many master planning projects in the UK and China utilising 21st Century Garden City approach. Yang is also a key figure in promoting green & low-carbon development approach in China. From 2013 to 2016, she served as the Co-chair of the UK-China Eco-Cities & Green Building Group. Between 2013 and 2014, she was seconded by the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office as British Principal Planning Expert to advise the Chinese Ministry of Housing & Urban-Rural Development on sustainable urbanisation. She also gave expert advice to Progressing Eco-City Policies into Mainstream Practice in China project in 2012, and ‘the Europe-China Eco-Cities Link ’ project in 2013. From 2015 to 2017, she led the UK-China pilot project on ‘the Green & Low-Carbon Development of Small Towns in China’, and was the lead author of The Technical Manual for Green & Low-Carbon Development of Small Towns in China In 2014, Yang was elected as a World Cities Summit Young Leader by Singapore, and was named as the Planner's Women of Influence in 2017, 2018. In 2017, recognising her innovative work and actions in promoting joined up thinking between different built environment professionals, she was conferred as a Fellow of Academy of Social Sciences. In 2018, she was conferred as a Fellow of the Royal Town Planning Institute. In May 2019, she was appointed as a Board Member of the British Library by the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport In September 2019, Yang was elected by the RTPI members as the RTPI's Vice President for 2020. She will lead the Institute as President in 2021. In her Manifesto, she states that ‘I believes the fundamental objective of the planning profession is to create a balanced system for People, Nature and Society to co-exist in harmony, I want to champion a revival of spirit for our profession by enhancing public appreciation, strengthening international collaboration on capacity building, and contributing to immediate actions on the climate and biodiversity emergency. I am also keen to do more to engage young planners and adopt new technologies to empower the modernisation.’