好色先生TV Live: Housing clients detail their development plans and how they are tackling build cost inflation and skills shortages
Manchester鈥檚 housing deliver agency Manchester Place is targeting more than tripling its delivery of new homes to 10,000 a year, the client鈥檚 chief executive Deborah McLaughlin has said.
Speaking at a 好色先生TV Live panel on tackling the housing crisis, chaired by 好色先生TV deputy editor Joey Gardiner, McLaughlin said her organisation was working to release more public land to increase its delivery from the current level of 3,000 units a year.
She said the city had 鈥渇inally produced a land disposal plan鈥 to speed up the release of public land, adding: 鈥淚n terms of public sector land we recognise it is not coming to market quickly enough.鈥
Manchester Place is an alliance between Manchester City Council and the Homes and Communities Agency.
McLaughlin said Manchester Place was facing capacity issues in terms of delivering tall residential blocks in the city and called for new entrants in the market, saying: 鈥淭he capacity for building these very tall buildings doesn鈥檛 exist.
鈥淲e have consents for 40 to 45 storey towers but only two companies in Manchester that can do that. So if you can, please give us a call.鈥
She said she was looking further afield for contractors, including to China after attending chancellor George Osborne鈥檚 trade mission to the country earlier this year: 鈥淲e are talking to investors in five different countries. We can鈥檛 slow down and wait for the market to catch up.鈥
She added that Manchester鈥檚 devolution deal with central government - including a 拢300m a year funding pot - was partly being used to help unlock development funding, 鈥減articularly for SMEs that are struggling to access finance.鈥
She said the council was also ready to use compulsory purchase powers to buy land where developers had planning consents but were not building.
Fellow panellist Andrew Whitaker, planning director at the Homes Builders Federation, welcomed the 拢6.9bn of additional funding announced by Osborne in the Spending Review yesterday.
He also said the introduction of starter homes as an alternative to rented homes to meet affordable homes obligations was 鈥渁 game changer鈥.
Whitaker said volume housebuilders were committed to increasing supply to help meet the government鈥檚 target of building one million new homes by 2020, and to deliver more 鈥渋ntermediate鈥 housing.
He said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 atrocious that people earning a proper wage can鈥檛 afford a home. The intermediate market has been forgotten - the government has been trying to help with that.鈥
Phil Wade, operations director at First Base, which is behind the major Silvertown regeneration scheme in east London, told delegates the client was facing challenges in the London market in terms of 鈥渞ampant鈥 build cost inflation and skills shortages.
Wade warned: 鈥淭here is uncertainty in terms of pricing. We are checking out viability the whole time. Sometimes at the eleventh hour you find the price you were going for is no longer on the table.鈥
Victoria Hills, chief executive of the Old Oak and Park Royal Development Corporation, which is in charge of the regeneration of the area around the planned HS2 and Crossrail station Old Oak Common, said 拢26bn of gross development value would be delivered there, including 25,500 homes.
She said the UK could learn from the level of ambition around major oversite developments on top of stations elsewhere in the world, including the West Kowloon development in Hong Kong.
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