Number of new affordable homes built in UK up 55% year on year

Taylor Scott International News

The latest figures show 66,640 new affordable homes were delivered in the UK in the last year, 55% more than the previous year and the fastest rate of growth since 1993. Communities Secretary Greg Clark said this was further proof of the government’s commitment to get more homes built. He announced that the number of social and affordable rented homes has increased by nearly two thirds, and the number of affordable homes to buy rose by 41% over the same time period. ‘We are far from complacent and the doubling of government investment in house building announced at the recent Spending Review reaffirms our commitment to deliver a million new homes by 2020,’ said Clark. He pointed out that affordable homes to rent and buy are a key part of that, helping to give young people and families across the country the best possible start in life. Housing Minister Brandon Lewis said it showed that house building efforts are paying off. ‘This is real progress but there is more to do. That’s why we are going further and increasing our investment in these homes to ensure many more people can benefit,’ he added. The figures mean that over 270,000 new affordable homes have been delivered since 2010. At the Spending Review last week, the government announced plans to double investment in house building to £8 billion, to help towards delivering one million homes by 2020 and to deliver the largest affordable housebuilding programme since the 1970s. This includes 135,000 new homes to buy through a new Help to Buy: Shared Ownership scheme, a new London Help to Buy, to help aspiring home owners in the capital to buy with a fraction of the deposit they would normally require and 200,000 new Starter Homes, which will be available at a 20% discount to young first time buyers. This is on top of measures included in the Housing and Planning Bill currently going through Parliament, including ensuring new Starter Homes are included on all reasonably sized development sites. The Bill will also mean giving communities the power to grant permission in principle on sites identified in local plans and on brownfield registers, to speed up the planning system while at the same time protecting the green belt and planning reforms to support small builders, with a requirement for councils to offer shovel ready sites for custom build homes. Taylor Scott International

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