"40% of homes granted planning permission in England go unbuilt" Shelter research
Friday, 4 September 2020 08:54
More than 380,000 homes granted planning permission between 2011
and 2019 remain unbuilt – accounting for 40% of all homes with
planning consent in England - new research from Shelter shows. The
housing charity’s analysis of data from the government and the
House Builders Federation reveals the backlog of unbuilt homes has
grown by a further 100,000 in the last...Request free trial
More
than 380,000 homes
granted planning permission between
2011
and
2019
remain
unbuilt –
accounting
for 40% of all
homes with
planning
consent
in
England -
new
research from Shelter shows.
The
housing
charity’s
analysis of data from the
government and the House Builders Federation
reveals
the
backlog
of
unbuilt homes has grown
by a further
100,000 in the
last year alone.
This
shows
planning
permission is
not
the primary
stumbling block
to getting homes built
–
and
is
why
Shelter
is arguing
that the
government’s new
planning reforms
will not boost housebuilding by
themselves.
The
government’s own 2018
review
found
that
private
developers
will
stall construction
if
there is a risk
of
flooding the
market, which
would reduce
the
price any
new
homes could
be
sold for.
It
is for this reason, Shelter is warning
planning reform is no replacement for government
investment.
The
charity is
urging the government
to
use
its
upcoming
Comprehensive
Spending Review
to accelerate
spending
on
social
housing
and
turbo-charge
construction
in
the face of
the
Covid
recession.
Social
housing is the
only type of housing that is affordable by
design with rents pegged to local income, which
would serve the government’s ‘levelling up’ agenda.
Polly
Neate, chief executive of
Shelter,
said:
"The
chronic
shortage
of
decent,
genuinely affordable homes in this country
is one that must be fixed. But the government’s
planning reforms fundamentally
misdiagnose the
problem.
“The
idea that the
planning
system
is
stopping homes being built is a myth. Across
the country
hundreds of thousands of “phantom
homes”
sit
on
sites
with
planning permission fully approved. Rubber
stamps are
no
replacement
for direct
investment
in
high-quality
housing.
“The
government must
roll
up its sleeves and build
the
homes
local
communities really
need,
now more than ever in the face
of a
Covid-recession.
It
should spend the
cash its
set
aside for housing that
much
faster
and
start building
social homes now.
The
only way we are going to start building what we need is
through pounds not
planning.”
-
This
analysis of
housing
supply and approvals by financial
year, uses the
English housing pipeline figures from the
House
Builders
Federation
and
Glenigans ‘New
Housing
Pipeline
q3
2019 Report’,
and new build completions figures from MHCLG table
120.
https://www.hbf.co.uk/documents/9579/HPL_REPORT_2019_3_FINAL.pdf
-
We
have
reasonably
assumed
that
developers take on
average two years
after full planning permission is granted to construct the
units approved by local authorities. This means
that a unit
approved in
2012/13 would
be expected to
be completed in 2014/15.
-
Comparing
2011/12 - 2016/17 units approved with completions
between
2013/14 –
2018/19, we
can
see that
382,225
homes
remain
unbuilt. This backlog
of unbuilt
homes has
increased by 101,223
units, when
compared with the same
position last year (comparing
2011/12 -
2015/16 units approved with completions between 2013/14 –
2017/18)
-
Sir Oliver
Letwin’s independent review of build out-
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/independent-review-of-build-out-final-report
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