Chief executive admits sales rate has halved at 拢261m Park Central since credit crunch began
Housebuilder Crest Nicholson is slowing development at its flagship Birmingham city centre regeneration scheme because of falling sales.
Stephen Stone, chief executive of Crest Nicholson, said the sales rate at the 拢261m, 1,600-home Park Central scheme had halved since the credit crunch began.
The news comes as figures from the National Housebuilding Council showed that in February sales of new houses in the UK were down by a quarter and starts on site down by a fifth from a year ago.
Until the middle of last year Crest was selling 15-20 homes a month at Park Central. Stone said: 鈥淭his has fallen to half that, and the build rate reflects that.鈥
He added: 鈥淔ortunately this is our only scheme to have its construction programme affected by the credit crunch.鈥
Stone said the fall in the rate of sales actually represented a return to typical market conditions. 鈥淲e鈥檙e back to the normal conditions, really. The past two years we鈥檝e had double normal sales on the back of buy-to-let investors.鈥
All but 250 of the 1,600 homes at Park Central are apartments. Stone said that 75-80% of Crest鈥檚 business was in more traditional housing schemes, which rely less on buy-to-let investors and are not being hit by the downturn.
Nevertheless, Stone said the firm was changing strategy to enable it to increase housing development in the medium term.
Previously 拢40-50m of Crest鈥檚 annual turnover has come from trading in the land market. In future, it will seek to build most of the sites it owns, aiming to raise production from 3,000 to 5,000 homes a year by 2012. Receipts from land sales would fall to a few million, Stone said.
Postscript
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