I miss the good old days
of George Osborne as Chancellor, with his hardhat and hi-vis jacket. He must
have visited every new home building site in the UK with his trademark attire!
For the last few years, the nearest Philip Hammond got to donning a ‘Bob the
Builder’ outfit was at his grandchild’s birthday party. However, with what
appears to be a change in focus by the Tories to ensure they get back in power
in 2022, they appear to have fallen in love with house building again with the
Chancellor’s promise to create 300,000 new households in a year.
Nationally, the number of
new homes created has topped 217,344 in the last year, the highest since the
financial crash of 2007/8. Looking closer to home: in total there were 1,000
‘net additional dwellings’ in the last 12 months in the Mid Sussex District Council
area, a decent increase of just 156.5% on the 2010 figure.
The figures show that 82.6%
of this additional housing was down to new build properties. In total, there
were 826 new dwellings built over the last year in Mid Sussex. In addition,
there were 188 additional dwellings created from converting commercial or
office buildings into residential property and a further one dwelling was added
as a result of converting houses into flats.
While these all added to the total
housing stock in the Mid Sussex area, there were 13 demolitions to take into
account.
I was encouraged to see
some of the new households in the Mid Sussex area had come from a change of
use. The planning laws were changed a few years back so that, in certain
circumstances, owners of properties didn’t need planning permission to change
office space in to residential use.
Now we have had the autumn
budget, Theresa May and Philip Hammond have set out their stall with housing as
their key focus. I was glad to see the Government introducing a variety of changes
to improve housing, including more funding for the supply side and an injection
of urgency into the planning system.
The biggest question is,
just where are the Government going to build all these new houses? Maybe a
topic for a future article?
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