BoKlok plans UK timber frame facility
BokLok, the modular housing joint venture between Ikea and construction giant Skanska is on the verge of signing a deal with a manufacturer to build its homes in the UK.
Graeme Culliton, UK MD of BoKlok, said the firm, which this summer announced its first UK development, on land owned by Bristol city council, was aiming to sign a memorandum of understanding with a UK supplier for its homes in the coming weeks.
BoKlok, which uses a timber-frame modular technology to produce schemes of up to four storeys, is aiming to grow in the UK through initially targeting sites in the Bristol region and the south coast of England. Culliton said the plan was that BoKlok鈥檚 UK homes will be built here, while UK apartments will be built in the firm鈥檚 existing facility in eastern Europe, to take advantage of a 鈥渢ried and tested鈥 supply chain.
He said: 鈥淥ur houses will be manufactured here in the UK 鈥 I鈥檓 not going to reveal where because we鈥檝e still got to sign the MOU with the supplier 鈥 they will be manufactured here in the UK, the apartment product will be manufactured in Estonia in an existing facility that has been used for the Nordics.鈥
Culliton said the firm hoped to sign a deal with a UK manufacturer in the next month.
BoKlok is a major home builder in Scandanavia, having built 12,000 homes in the past two decades, mainly in Sweden, after being set up by Ikea鈥檚 founder, Ingvar Kamprad, with the aim of offering homes affordable to people on an average wage. It currently develops around 1,200 homes every year, acting as developer, with homes manufactured under licence in a facility in Estonia.
Culliton said the firm, as in Sweden, would target buyers on average incomes, meaning homes will ultimately be available to purchase for around 拢250,000. He said the firm was currently working to sign five development deals, amounting to a pipeline of hundreds of homes.
In October, the firm said it had been selected by Bristol city council to build out 200 homes on the Airport Road site in the south of the city, with 30% made available for social rent and shared ownership.
Culliton said the firm would look to expand geographically outside of its current Bristol and south-coast focus, but only when the business had proven itself.
Culliton鈥檚 comments came after BoKlok chief executive Jonas Spangenberg spoke at Tuesday鈥檚 Bristol Housing Festival.
Spangenberg said the firm was in the middle of investing heavily in its existing facility in order to bring automation and digitisation 鈥渢o the next level鈥. He added: 鈥淚n doing this we have been heavily influenced by other industries, such as the car industry, but not by the construction industry.鈥
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