ao link
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In

You are viewing 1 of your 1 free articles

Delivering homes for the North of England

Housing is key to revitalising the North of England, but it’s more important to look to the future than the past, says Carol Matthews

Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Sharelines

Delivering homes for the |North of England, by Carol Matthews

Good quality, affordable housing of the right type and in the right place is essential to the health and well-being of individuals and communities. It should also be seen as an essential precondition for the economic renaissance of our great northern cities. If we are serious about closing the gap in economic output and productivity which plagues the North, housing is key.

Riverside is part of Homes for the North (H4N) – an alliance of 19 large developing housing associations which have put housing at the heart of the North’s economic revival.

As a group, we have at times found ourselves, not unreasonably, being asked: “So, just how many homes does the North really need?” And we had been scrabbling around for a convincing answer, until now.


READ MORE

‘500,000 homes needed in North over next decade’‘500,000 homes needed in North over next decade’
An important argument has been partly wonAn important argument has been partly won
We need investment to support Northern regenerationWe need investment to support Northern regeneration

Working with planning consultants Lichfields, we set out to address this question directly. We started with a bottom-up approach, reviewing existing local plans of the 72 northern local authorities and aggregating the level of ‘objectively assessed need’ identified in each plan.

During the research, we stumbled across the problem highlighted in the Housing White Paper published earlier this year: inconsistency. These local authority assessments have been undertaken at different times, using different baselines, methodologies and assumptions about growth. To counter this, we performed a ‘reality check’, taking government household projections, and overlaying ambitious but realistic economic growth scenarios.

So, what’s the answer? How many new homes does the north need?

Half a million.

“Early analysis suggests that the government’s proposed method for establishing need – and published housing projections by locality – will only perpetuate the overheated markets of the south.”

That’s the number we project the North will need over the next 10 years, to support the sort of economic ambition set out in the Northern Powerhouse Independent Economic Review. This equates to 50,000 each year.

However, in the wake of the White Paper, the government’s recently published consultation ‘Planning for the Right Homes in the Right Places’ has the potential to undermine a target for growth.

Early analysis suggests that the government’s proposed method for establishing need – and published housing projections by locality – will only perpetuate the overheated markets of the South, and could mean the North contributes very little to solving the nation’s housing crisis. This is because the method is essentially backward-looking – dealing with yesterday’s market failures rather than tomorrow’s ambitions for growth.

This would mean missing a massive opportunity. It would also do little to support a rebalanced economy, which should surely be a fundamental plank of the Industrial Strategy.

It’s easy to get obsessed with numbers though, and the continued revitalisation of many areas in the North requires so much more. Quality, diversity and value for money of housing are essential to make the North somewhere people want to live, while improving its attractiveness for businesses and future investment.

Even communities secretary Sajid Javid seems to get this, recently announcing a root and branch review of social housing through a new Social Housing Green Paper.

In doing this he said: “What role can social housing policy play in building safe and integrated communities, where people from different backgrounds get along no matter what type of housing they live in?”

“We as housing providers hold the key to unlocking the north’s potential by helping to build safe and integrated communities.”

In answer to this, we as housing providers (quite literally) hold the key to unlocking the North’s potential by helping to build safe and integrated communities. Personally, I am aglow after recently visiting three extra care schemes in Sunderland and seeing the intergenerational communities they house.

Each scheme provides fantastic, modern accommodation for both sale and rent, for people aged 55-plus looking to downsize, as well as those with care and support needs. This includes self-contained apartments, with care services onsite and a range of communal facilities. Not only is there provision for safe and secure accommodation, but jobs are also created in the short and longer term through apprenticeships in the construction industry, work for trade suppliers and subcontractors and ultimately management, care and support services.

Benefits of diverse housing schemes such as these are far-reaching and we need many more of them. We should not be looking to what has been done in the past to determine future housing supply.

As Abraham Lincoln once said, “the best way to predict your future is to create it”. We need to be striving to achieve more, not less, to generate truly sustainable northern cities.

Carol Matthews, chief executive, Riverside

Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Add New Comment
You must be logged in to comment.