Posts with tag: housing crisis

Green Belt Land Could Solve the Housing Crisis

Published On: May 26, 2015 at 2:48 pm

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It is well known that Britain is only building half the homes needed to resolve the housing crisis. But it is believed that if green belt land is released, an influx of new homes could solve the problem.

House price growth is at its highest since before the recession. The average property is now £273,000 and in London it is almost double, at £498,000.

Founder and Chief Executive of Hill Partnerships – a large house builder in the South East – Andy Hill, says that the crisis will continue if the restrictions on green belt land remain harsh. The controls on these areas were created to protect the countryside.

Hill explains: “Ultimately, if bits of green belt land are released at a time and it’s controlled, it’s not a major issue. Everyone is trying to develop brownfield sites as quickly as we can. We understand they’ve got to take priority, but developing on brownfield sites takes a long time and we need to get the house building numbers up.”

A brownfield site is land that has already been developed, but has the potential to be redeveloped. House builders have snapped up these sites in the last few years, as tight restrictions remain on the green belt.

According to the Government, there is enough brownfield land in England for 2.5m new homes, a large amount in London, where demand is at its highest.

Chancellor George Osborne revealed last year that he would build 200,000 homes on brownfield land by 2020 by placing local development orders on over 90% of sites that are suitable.

Brownfield sites can be expensive, however, as they need to be prepared, unlike undeveloped land.

Hill continues: “Getting planning permission is another hurdle. Gone are the days of being able to buy a piece of land and start developing nine months later. Starting from scratch, it takes about a year to get approval, then up to another 12 months to start on site. It’s amazing and highly frustrating how long it takes to get planning.”

The green belt accounts for 13% of the land area in England, around 1,639,560 hectares (4m acres), while brownfield land makes up just 70,000 hectares, about 100,000 football pitches.

Green Belt Land Could Solve the Housing Crisis

Green Belt Land Could Solve the Housing Crisis

Hill Partnerships is based in Waltham Abbey, Essex, and built over 1,300 homes last year, predominantly in the South East. There are 1,635 in the pipeline this year, with a total sales value predicted at £650m.

In the whole of Britain, 118,770 new homes were built in 2014, found the Department for Communities and Local Government. This is less than half the industry-accepted annual figure for tackling the housing shortage.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors’ (RICS) latest monthly index revealed that 33% more of its members reported price rises in the UK in April than in March. This is the highest number since August 2014.

Simon Rubinsohn, Chief Economist at RICS, cautions: “Alongside an increased flow of second-hand stock, it is absolutely critical that the new Government focuses on measures to boost the flow of new build [homes].”1

Hill Partnerships saw a £250m turnover in 2014, with a profit of £18m, up 30% on the previous year. The firm has five offices in the South East and employs 350 people. Hill, 56, started the business in 1999 after being a manager of a construction firm.

“We started as a contractor for housing associations and built our first development site in 2003. We got in at just the right time before the house boom of the early 2000s. Since then, the business has grown steadily; about 10% to 30% growth per annum.”

The company built its first major development in 2005, a 137-unit block of flats in Stevenage. Its current projects include a 249-home North West Cambridge development and 237 homes in Barton Park, Oxford.

Four-fifths of its work is outside London, but projects in the capital are mainly in the suburbs. Hill Partnerships has invested in Hackney, Walthamstow and currently is working on a 140-home scheme in Southwark.

Suburbs like Hackney and Walthamstow have become sought-after locations recently.

Property prices in Hackney, once considered rundown, have grown by 800% in the last 30 years. The average flat in Hackney is now £444,391, according to Rightmove. A semi-detached house would cost over £1.1m.

Hill has found that homes in Walthamstow are continuing to increase. In the past three years, prices have risen by about 80%, with the average one-bedroom flat costing £300,000. He is currently selling a two-bed penthouse in the area for £520,000.

Hill explains: “We’ve focused away from zones in central London, which are far more expensive. Areas such as Walthamstow have had terrific growth. The area is high in demand and has become a very popular place to live.”

He also says that the possibility of interest rate rises next year could impact business, as people could become cautious about borrowing money.

However, he says that business is resilient at present, as “there has never been a better time to get a mortgage” and people are fixing good rates for five years.

Hill adds: “The real problem is getting the first time buyers onto the ladder. It’s very, very difficult. Mortgage lenders make them jump through hoops. They’re always looking for reasons why they could fail rather than focusing on helping them succeed. I haven’t seen enough of the Help to Buy Isas to comment on their effectiveness, but the concept is good.”1 

1 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/festival-of-business/11624978/Britains-housing-crisis-should-more-green-belt-land-be-released.html

 

 

The Villagers Refusing Millions of Pounds from Developers

Published On: May 26, 2015 at 11:03 am

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In a charming village in West Sussex, residents are putting up a fight. They are refusing millions of pounds from property developers who want to replace the countryside with a new 10,000-home town.

Recently, farmer Robert Worsley turned down £275m for his 550-acre farm in the village of Twineham. Read more about his land battle: /farmer-turns-down-275m-for-his-land/.

Robert is now the face of the campaign group Locals Against Mayfield Building Sprawl (Lambs), which is fighting the proposals. Around 200 landowners are supporting Robert’s struggle, amounting to 4,300 acres.

Other Lambs explain why they do not want to lose their picturesque landscape:

Veronica Brookes, 72, lives at the 200-acre Sakeham Farm near Henfield – noted in the Domesday Book – with her husband Tony Baldwin, 86. They have lived there for 25 years.

She says: “There have been rumours going around for the past two years, maybe longer, that developers wanted our land; this was followed by a visit from one of the Mayfield team.

“Both Tony and I were extremely negative with them from the start; the proposed scheme is totally inappropriate – we live on a flood plain, 50 acres of our holding is brook land [wetland], which is flooded annually by the River Adur.

“At a meeting I attended last year, their ideas about the town appeared ridiculous – they think people would happily go around on golf carts and be bussed in and out of hubs on the A23 to commute to London. It simply wouldn’t work. Who would want to live like that?”

The Villagers Refusing Millions of Pounds from Developers

The Villagers Refusing Millions of Pounds from Developers

Veronica continues: “In total, they came to us about three or four times and offered us about £5m, with the proviso that they would pay us more for an option now than if they got planning permission later, trying to force our hand I suppose.

“Money is important but it’s definitely not everything. Your mode of life is far more important. We have a lovely home; we work extremely hard, Tony still works, and anyway we don’t want to move or see this area of outstanding beauty spoilt for future generations.”1

Pauline and Paul McBride, 32, created the Sussex Prairie Garden near Henfield on the farm where they live with their extended family.

Pauline says: “I just cannot come to terms with the sickening idea that our garden could be bulldozed by developers and all this could be torn up. This garden is our dream: a wild and naturalistic space with big swathes of colour and texture, open to the public. It is a wonderful place.

“We get visited by gardening enthusiasts form all over the world, including coachloads of Russians, as well as British families. And yet we started this beautiful garden from nothing. I was born here on the farm and it was an idyllic childhood, so it was natural to want to come back.

“And now the garden teems with wildlife – insects, birds, mammals and amphibians. Visitors find it restorative. The pleasure and enjoyment everyone gets is immeasurable.

“So although I have sympathy for people needing to live somewhere, thanks to our burgeoning society, and I fully understand there are pressures for councils to find places for people to live, I believe this beautiful Sussex countryside is a sacred haven and we shouldn’t be wantonly destroying it.

“The first time the developers came knocking I sent them straight away – I couldn’t bear the thought of it, even though they were offering us £5m. I had to send them away a couple of times.”

Pauline stresses: “I can’t imagine this garden being destroyed; that would be heart-rending. And I can’t imagine walking away from the people who love it. Why would you? How could we?

“How can I put a price tag on this? It is impossible to think about it. I wouldn’t sell at any price. I hope the developers give up and accept this people power. Paul and I have given our all for this place. I would die if I had to destroy it.”1

Co-director of the All England Jumping Course in Hickstead, Haywards Heath, Edward Bunn, 54, lives in the area with his wife Julia and their four children.

He explains: “We’ve been approached four or five times now by various agents trying to persuade us to let them put an access road across our land from the A23 to the west. They didn’t want to buy any of our 600 acres, but just for that access, which would have cut our land in half – and which would become a public highway if their plans came to fruition – they were happy to offer us £5m or £6m.

“Of course we turned them down. No one around here wants a new market town built on this land. Yes, there is a need for housing in the South East, but Mayfield wants to put it in completely the wrong place.

“Our family came here in 1958 and it is a lovely bit of Sussex countryside, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, with a nice river running through it. This housing would be a blot on the landscape.

“Moreover, it is nowhere near any existing infrastructure, employment or transport. If you look towards Haywards Heath there are towns that could be expanded, and that makes more sense, as that’s where the stations are, that’s where the work is. And no one will object to that at all.

“Instead, Mayfield are chancing their arm by proposing to build here and we’re all living under a cloud as a result. People haven’t been able to sell their homes around here for two years because of this, and everyone from councillors to MPs – as well as locals – is against the idea.

“There’s a lot of feeling in the area against Mayfield’s town, and Lambs will fight tirelessly to stop it.”1

Freelance radio journalist Jane Watson, 51, lives in Twineham with her husband Richard, 52, and their three children.

She says: “Villagers like us haven’t been offered huge pay-offs, but our homes and the beautiful countryside around us have been left under a huge Mayfield cloud, which shows no signs of dissipating despite universal local opposition.

“This is the kind of rural community that is becoming rarer and rarer in the South East of England and it should be valued, not destroyed. But apparently it doesn’t matter what we think.

“Even though every level of local government – from parish to district councils, and both local MPs, Sir Nicholas Soames and Nick Herbert – have objected to the scheme, the developers don’t seem to accept it won’t succeed. Even the official government planning inspector has turned down the housing development. But local democracy has been turned on its head in Sussex.”1

1 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/countryside/11618126/The-great-rural-fightback-meet-the-villagers-turning-down-millions-from-developers.html

 

 

New App Lets You Donate to Homeless People

Published On: May 19, 2015 at 3:21 pm

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Donate Locate is a new app developed by creative agency Soul to avoid people not giving to the homeless.

New App Lets You Donate to Homeless People

New App Lets You Donate to Homeless People

The app was developed in connection with London homeless charity The Connection. Instead of searching through your purse for any spare change, you can now donate through your smartphone.

Donate Locate gives the option of giving £1, £3 or £5 to The Connection when you see a homeless person. At the same time, the app records your location using your phone’s GPS and sends this to the charity, so that they can identify where homeless people are.

Soul’s Director, Shaun Moran, explains the idea: “Often, we’re told not to give to homeless people on the street in case they spend the money on drugs and alcohol. However, it’s when you see them on the street that compels you to want to give. The app solves the dilemma of how to help the people you see without giving to them directly.”

Donators will receive a confirmation text message upon contributing and the money is added to their mobile operator bill or through their pre-pay account.

Moran says the app has the power to “save lives”, as homeless people will not be able to spend the money on the things that could “contribute to their early death.”

Moran adds: “The other reason to care is that you’re both raising money and saving time for a great charity. The app raises money through donations and saves time by helping the outreach team locate homeless people.”

He concludes: “Being told not to give to homeless people in the street is a well-publicised and long-running issue. Finally, here’s the solution.”1

Find Donate Locate on the App Store.

1 Moran, S. (2015) ‘Homeless app to help save lives’, Metro, 19 May, p.37

Generation Rent’s New Director Revealed

Published On: May 15, 2015 at 2:50 pm

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The director of tenant lobby group Generation Rent, Alex Hilton, is stepping down from his position today.

Hilton is leaving the organisation and Betsy Dillner will be replacing him as director.

Dillner is currently the Community Campaigns Manager at the group after joining in January 2014. She has been at the front of a development-of-local-grass-roots campaign around the country.

Generation Rent's New Director Revealed

Generation Rent’s New Director Revealed

Dillner hopes to make the future brighter for communities. She previously lived in the USA, where she was a community organiser focusing on areas such as housing, immigration, health care and finance sector reform.

Dillner has a BA in Women’s and Gender Studies and an MA in Community Organising from Queen Mary University of London.

Chair of Generation Rent, Stephen Battersby, says: “As the first director of the organisation, Alex has raised housing up the political agenda and highlighted the plight of private tenants, which for too long has been ignored by national and local politicians.

“Alex has raised the profile of the organisation beyond our wildest dreams and this should enable us to increase the number of supporters and also encourage others to work with us to help private tenants who are disadvantaged.

“The board has great confidence in Betsy and her appointment also highlights that working with private tenants at the community level is a priority area.”1

Hilton explains: “The housing crisis is the biggest issue of our era and it has been a privilege to be part of Generation Rent. However, I have decided that the one piece missing among a diverse range of housing campaigners is a credible and effective political voice. I now intend to work full time on creating and building that voice.

“We have a new government, an opposition uncommonly receptive to ideas and a growing body of people demanding change. I know that Betsy has the steel and the energy to take advantage of the opportunities to empower renters.”1

Dillner says: “In 18 months, Generation Rent has built up incredible momentum, and I look forward to building on the work Alex and the team have done. The housing crisis continues to cause hardship for renters and their families, and we will remain at the forefront of the growing movement to fight it.”1

1 http://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2015/5/generation-rent-appoints-new-director

Political Parties’ Housing Promises

Published On: May 7, 2015 at 12:59 pm

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As Britain’s take to the polls in the closest election in decades, a number of people may still be undecided where to put their ‘X.’

With that in mind, here are the main parties’ housing policies, which may just sway some voters:

Conservatives

  • Extend the Right to Buy scheme to 1.3 million Housing Association properties within England
  • Launch a Help to Buy ISA to support first-time buyers to get onto the property ladder
  • Build 200,000 homes for first-time buyers under 40, with 20% discount
  • Create a £1bn brownfield regeneration fund to create sites for an additional 400,00 homes

Labour

  • Build 200,000 new homes per year each year by 2020
  • Bring in minimum term three-year tenancy agreements in the private sector
  • Impose a ‘mansion tax’ on all properties valued at over £2m to fund additional housing
  • Prioritise local first-time buyers in new housing areas

Liberal Democrats

  • Up housebuilding to 300,000 homes per year
  • Prevent landlords from renting out insufficiently insulated homes
  • Implement Rent to Own scheme, with 30,000 homes promised by 2020

UKIP

  • Build one million homes on previously developed land by the year 2025
  • Remove stamp duty on first £250,000 of new properties on this land
  • Preserve the Greenbelt
Political Parties' Housing Promises

Political Parties’ Housing Promises

SNP

  • Complete abolition of the bedroom tax
  • Support Help to Buy and other shared equity regimes
  • Back investment of 100,000 affordable homes in the UK
  • Prevent restriction of housing benefit for 18-21 year olds

Green Party

  • Build 500,000 social rental properties by the year 2020
  • Restore 350,000 unoccupied properties back into full use
  • Introduce five-year tenancies with rent caps
  • Prevent right to buy council homes

Plaid Cymru

  • Provide rent controls to assist tenants
  • Support further implementation of energy efficiency measures

Property and how best to solve the housing crisis has been at the forefront of the election campaign. While the outcome of the vote remains in the balance, it is a certainty that whoever takes residence in Number 10 will be judged over their housing strategy during their term in office.

Property Market is Strong Despite Election

Activity in the UK’s property market was stronger in every sector last month than a year previously, despite uncertainty surrounding the general election.

Research from Connells Survey and Valuation indicates that there were 13% more property valuations in April than a year before, although April’s total dropped by 32% compared with March 2015.

The company’s Corporate Services Director, John Bagshaw, says that for all areas, from first time buyers to remortgages, valuations are up compared to last year. He states that this proves the housing market has momentum and he predicts this will continue into the new Parliament.

However, Bagshaw also notes that there could be an unclear election result from today’s poll, which will affect confidence.

Property Market is Strong Despite Election

Property Market is Strong Despite Election

“The latest monthly dip from March is generally a seasonal effect at this time of year so if this monthly slowdown continues further we’ll know that something has changed more fundamentally. Yet so far, there is no sign of a serious housing market slowdown.”

The study also found that in April, remortgaging surpassed the overall property market with a 25% increase on April 2014, overcoming a 34% drop from March 2015.

Bagshaw thinks that the outperformance of remortgaging is down to record low mortgage rates, which are expected to stay down for the near future: “Inflation is at zero and there’s little sign that the Bank of England [BoE] will need to raise the base rate imminently. In the meantime, mortgage rates have plummeted to the lowest level in over four years.

“Thus, many households may be capitalising on this period by refinancing to a fixed mortgage.”

The buy-to-let sector has seen the greatest month-on-month drop compared to other areas of the market, falling by 36% in April. However, it has grown the most since April 2014, up 29%.

Bagshaw explains that this could be due to rent control and three-year tenancy plans: “Some would-be landlords are perhaps waiting to see whether and how these policies will be implemented before looking to invest further. Yet the long-term picture is extremely positive.

“Over the past year, landlords have benefitted from a booming jobs market, which has led more people to move within commuting distance of work, thus increasing demand for rental properties in certain hot spots.

“Equally, as real term wages pick up there has been an increase in the rental prices tenants are willing to pay.”

Activity from first time buyers has slowed, with valuations for these buyers falling 33% since March. Since April 2014, first time buyer activity has grown just 7%.

Furthermore, activity by homeowners already on the property ladder was minimal. Valuations for established homeowners fell 27% compared with March, increasing by only 3% in the past year.

Bagshaw adds: “First time buyers have had bundles of extra support over the last five years, but still not quite enough to power any serious growth in the number stepping onto the property ladder for the first time. This might disappoint some, especially with the plethora of Government schemes to boost first timers.

“Yet the greatest squeeze has been among those who already own their home who simply aren’t looking to upsize in the same way as might have been the case a decade ago.

“Householders might have said goodbye to the recession years ago, but the crunch on disposable incomes and aspiration to move to a bigger home might well last a decade.”1

1 http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/uk-housing-market-activity-2015050710479.html