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Housing minister announces £38m for modular houses across England

Housing minister Esther McVey has said she wants a green housing “revolution” in the North of England composed of hi-tech, prefabricated, modular houses.

Modular housing involves building the majority of a property in a factory beforehand, allowing for mass production and for the main structure to be transported in one go to the site and fitted into place.

Backers of prefab construction point to the need for less construction traffic and the need to address the sector’s ageing core workforce, which is currently being topped up by migrant workers.

She has announced £38m for the initiative, but Labour has criticised it noting that only two of the councils benefiting from the extra cash are situated above the Watford Gap, the theoretical divide that separates the north and south of England.

Hull City Council and Cheshire West and Chester Council will take a slice of the funding, along with North Somerset Council and Bristol City Council in the south west, and Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council and Hastings Borough Council on the south coast.

The money will help with the construction of 2,072 homes and McVey used a speech in Sheffield to say she believes the industry could be worth £40bn post-Brexit and become Britain’s hi-tech manufacturing answer to Silicon Valley.

Of the potential in the north of England she said: “We must invest in this new technology. It’s as simple as that. The benefits are clear. Some modular homes can be built in a factory over a week. And assembled on site in a day.

“Industry has told us some homes built using modern methods can have 80 per cent fewer defects and heating bills up to 70 per cent lower.

“Homes built using modern methods can be of higher quality, greener and built to last. I want to see a housing green revolution. In the north of England where the first industrial revolution began.”

The deals are the latest to be awarded through the government’s £350m Local Authority Accelerated Construction programme, which was launched to accelerate the delivery of local authority housing schemes.

Labour’s shadow housing minister John Healey said McVey had “been caught out” during the announcement.

“The Tories’ pathetic housing proposals have nothing to offer the north of England,” said the Opposition frontbencher.

“The Housing Minister has been caught out making promises to the north, but then giving most of this paltry pot of cash to areas in the south.”

Critics of the new housing tech say smaller suppliers are overlooked in the process and imported materials are favoured, whereas traditionally constructed homes contain 80 per cent of UK-produced materials.

Mike Leonard, from Building Alliance, said modular houses would last for only half the time of a masonry-built home – approximately 60 years – and were “fire prone” given their timber structures.

“They are not designed to last. To put it bluntly, they are caravans without wheels,” he said.

By Jack Loughran

Source: E&T

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Housing minister announces plans to boost UK proptech sector with data

Housing minister Esther McVey has announced plans to “bring about a digital revolution in the property sector” by opening up local data to UK proptech firms.

The Conservative MP for Tatton yesterday pledged to open up Compulsory Purchase Order (CPO) data including energy performance certificates and square footage information on properties and introduce a national index of all brownfield data to help developers to find brownfield land to build on.

McVey claimed that the data would offer enormous benefits to both homebuyers and the property sector.

“Whatever homebuyers prioritise, whether it’s the quality of local schools, the probability of getting a seat on a train, or having easy access to leisure facilities, this technology could transform the way we find and purchase homes,” she said.

“And new technology will link builders to brownfield sites more easily, enhance how developers engage with local communities, help builders deliver new homes and modernise the way we buy and sell land and houses, cutting the time it takes to get housing from the drawing board to families getting the keys.”

A press release from the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government suggested that the plans could give communities models and interactive maps of planned developments and allow them to comment on planning applications online, on phones and on the go. They could also allow prospective home buyers to use commute time calculators when they are looking at properties, explore financing options, and receive step-by-step assistance on the buying process.

Developers, meanwhile, could be enabled to identify sites so that more houses are built more quickly quickly locate suitable brownfield sites suitable for development.

Sector response

The government estimates that the proptech sector is potentially worth £6 billion in the UK and already receives 10 percent of global proptech investment.

These plans could help it further grow by giving startups and SMEs that lack resources access to tools that can analyse multiple datasets.

Representatives of the property sector were cautiously optimistic about the plans.

Michael Stone, founder and CEO of new home specialists Stone Real Estate, argued that the digital strategy would only reach its potential if the government added easier access to public land.

“Any initiative to open up land supply and provide greater transparency within the house building process should be welcomed,” Stone said in a statement.

“After all, we’re building 200,000 new homes a year nationally while the reality is that we need to deliver 300,000, so that’s some deficit that needs to be addressed. However, whilst the Housing Minister’s announcements today on promoting digitisation and better brownfield site identification will be welcomed, perhaps they should go a step further and start mandating that public land is also utilised more readily.

“There’s an ironic reality that while the government has failed to bolster house building via a number of recent initiatives, a very real solution remains right under their nose. The swathes of untapped land that could be used to develop and deliver more homes are largely controlled by the very public sector that is responsible for, you guessed it, building these homes in the first place.”

Others were more sceptical about the value of the data to lower-income citizens.

“Govt should stimulate the housing market & end class-distinction, it has to be prepared to listen to low-income households with a greater understanding of their needs & greater cooperation if it is to adequately address the real issues people are confronted with on a daily basis,” property developer Leciester & Leicester responded in a tweet.

By Thomas Macaulay

Source: Tech World