104,000 new homes on brownfield land to tackle Yorkshire’s housing crisis
New research from the Northern Housing Consortium (NHC) has found there’s capacity for up to 104,000 new homes on brownfield land in the Yorkshire and the Humber region.
This will help the Government deliver 1.5m new homes over the next 5 years and play a part in finding homes for the 150,000 people currently on the region’s housing waiting lists. ‘
The NHC is calling for a £4.2 billion funding package from Government over ten years to prepare the brownfield land in the North for new homes.
The current Brownfield Housing Fund is set to support 24,000 new homes. However, NHC research has found Whitehall red tape is stifling the effectiveness of this fund and some of the North’s brownfield sites are not eligible for funding.
To deliver as many homes as possible on Brownfield land over ten years, Government funding must be:
Northern Housing Consortium chief executive Tracy Harrison said: “There is a massive opportunity in Yorkshire and the Humber to unlock land for over 100,000 homes, helping provide much needed homes, regenerate communities and rebalance the economy away from London and the South East.
“But the current funding rules don’t work. Central government requirements mean some of the most deprived areas in need of regeneration are not being developed to provide much needed homes. Brownfield funding should be further devolved to give local government and combined authorities the flexibility to use it where it’s needed most.
“The Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) has started to review brownfield funding and the value-for-money appraisal process for housing and land investment. We are keen to work with the Government to deliver changes which will help our members regenerate communities and unleash the benefits of brownfield-first development.”