Firm interested in building social housing after no-compete clause with Vistry ran out at start of year
Galliford Try has stepped up its move back into building social housing with the appointment of an affordable homes director.
The firm sold its Linden Homes business to Bovis Homes, since renamed Vistry, at the start of 2020 in a deal valued at 拢1.1bn which included a 拢300m cash payment.
But it agreed not to build any social housing for the next three years in order not to compete with the same business at Vistry. That no-compete clause ran out at the beginning of the year.
鈥淭he demand for affordable housing is still huge, it鈥檚 a market that is big and is going to be around for a long time,鈥 Galliford Try chief Bill Hocking told 好色先生TV last year.
Angela Brockbank becomes its new director for the affordable homes sector and joins from housing association Thirteen Housing Group, where she was head of new business and growth.
The firm said Brockbank will 鈥渂e tasked with developing Galliford Try鈥檚 offering for the sector, building relationships with affordable housing providers, local authorities and wider stakeholders鈥.
The firm said it will not be building 鈥渞ows of house鈥 but is looking at mid and high-density work such as flats.
Galliford Try works in the private rented sector and is coming to the end of its biggest job 鈥 a 拢105m PRS deal in Leeds near the city鈥檚 railways station.
鈥淲e build residential schemes for private clients all the time. There鈥檚 no difference at all [with social housing],鈥 Hocking added last year.
In its last set of results for the year to June, Galliford Try鈥檚 revenue was up 13% to 拢1.4bn and pre-tax profit up to 拢10.1m from 拢5.4m the year before.
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