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London to get another 11 new housing zones

The Mayor of London has announced 11 new Housing Zones that will provide 24,554 new homes and create new neighbourhoods across the capital. An additional £200 million has been designated to the final 11 zones, which stretch from Havering to Kingston and Enfield and bring the total number planned in London to 31 which will see 77,000 new homes built. The aim is to boost housing supply, stimulate building and produce the new low cost homes London needs to meet its growing population. Some 34% of the 77,000 new homes will be affordable, alongside transformational regeneration of key town centres, train station hubs and housing estates. The Mayor made the announcement as he officially opened a new affordable housing development in the heart of London's West End. Trenchard House, spanning across Broadwick and Hopkins Street, is a former derelict Metropolitan Police hostel, on Greater London Authority acquired land released by the Mayor. The site has undergone a £54 million redevelopment to build 78 new homes, including 65 affordable one to three bedroom apartments. The affordable apartments are intermediate rent with some offered at 75% discount to market rates. Exact rents are based on resident's incomes, and many of them work night shifts in the theatres and bars surrounding Soho and will now be within walking distance of their jobs. The site, which had lain vacant for almost 13 years, is one of the 414 hectares of land transferred to the Mayor with every surplus site owned by City Hall now released for development. The intermediate homes are part of the 100,000 affordable homes the Mayor is on track to deliver by the end of his term. ‘Meeting the unprecedented demand for housing after 30 years of historic failure to build new homes is a critical issue affecting the capital. That is why I have led an enormous programme of regeneration with my 31 housing zones that will transform communities across London, creating nearly 80,000 new homes, plus new transport hubs and schools,’ said Johnson. ‘This new housing development in the heart of the West End is delivering a life line to hard working local people who were priced out of Soho and desperate to reside nearby their places of work. These apartments are just some of the 100,000 new affordable homes being delivered over my two mayoral terms,’ he explained. ‘This site forms part of more than 400 hectares of developable land the GLA inherited and which I have now released every inch of, to ensure as many homes as possible are built throughout London,’ he added. As part of the Mayor's commitment to double house building, London's Housing Zones will unlock regeneration on hundreds of hectares of brownfield land across the capital. The special status has been awarded to areas identified and packaged up by local authorities. It removes all unnecessary planning restrictions, combined with the funds to maximise development, and fast track homes and supporting infrastructure. Continue reading

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Index shows UK prices increased by just 0.3% in February

Residential property prices in the UK increased by 0.3% in February and there was a slight growth taking the annual increase to 4.8%, the latest house price index shows. This took average prices to £196,930 and overall the annual rate of growth has remained between 3% and 5% since the summer of 2015, according to the data from lender the Nationwide. The index report also says that the number of mortgages approved for house purchase increased sharply in January to almost 75,000, up from around 71,000 approvals in December and the highest number since January 2014. However, Nationwide’s chief economist Robert Gardner pointed out that much of the increase is likely to be related to the impending increase in Stamp Duty on second homes which is due to take effect in April 2016. He pointed out that after declining gradually over the past 12 years, the rate of home ownership in England stabilised in 2014/2015 but at 63.6%, this is well below the peak of 70.9% recorded in 2003. ‘This is likely to have brought forward a significant number of purchases, which in turn will probably result in a fall back in approvals during the spring/summer. Looking through this volatility we expect the underlying pace of activity to increase in the quarters ahead as improving labour market conditions and low borrowing costs provide ongoing support,’ he said. Gardner pointed out that after declining gradually over the past 12 years, the rate of home ownership in England stabilised in 2014/2015 but at 63.6%, this is well below the peak of 70.9% recorded in 2003. ‘If we look at the shift in tenure patterns by age over the past decade, we see a particularly marked decline in home ownership rates amongst the younger age groups, especially amongst 25 to 34 year olds, traditionally the segment containing most first time buyers. While there was a marginal uptick in 2015, the proportion of younger adults who own their own home, currently 37%, remains considerably lower than 10 years ago,’ he explained. ‘Over the same period, the proportion of people renting increased from 43% to 63%. For 16 to 24 year olds, the proportion renting increased from 73% to 92% over the same period. The increase has occurred in the private rental sector, which currently houses 19% of total households. Over the past 10 years, the number of privately rented households has increased by 75% to 4.3 million,’ Gardner said. He also pointed out that the latest English Housing Survey showed that the proportion of private renters who expect to buy a home at some point in the future declined from 61% to 57%, the lowest reading since the survey began in 2008/2009. Even amongst those who expect to buy a home, for most this remains a longer term aspiration, with 75% expecting it to take at least two years. March is likely to be similar in terms of house prices and sales, according to Alex… Continue reading

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Average rents in Scotland up 2.3% year on year

Average rents in Scotland increased by 2.3% year on year in January but remained static month on month at £548, according to the latest index figures. However, the average figure is being distorted by high increases in some regions such as Edinburgh and the Lothians where rents were up by 6.4%, the buy to let index from lettings agent Your Move shows. Meanwhile, rents in the East of Scotland were 1.7% lower than a year ago and they fell by 0.2% year on year in Glasgow. The index also shows that slower house price growth is hampering landlord returns with a fall of 5.8% in the year to January but arrears have improved with 11.1% tenants late paying, the lowest level since July 2015. Previously, arrears surged over the autumn to reach a record high of 13.8% in October 2015, before beginning to improve. However, tenant’s finances remain in worse shape than 12 months ago. In January 2015 as little as 7.1% of all rent due was late. A breakdown of the figures show that in January 2016, rents in Edinburgh and the Lothians were 6.4% or £38 higher than a year ago, the fastest annual rent rise on record. This is nearly three times quicker than average rent growth across the whole of Scotland. On average, across Scotland as a whole rents climbed 2.3% in the 12 months to January 2016, equal to £12 in absolute terms. This is only slightly faster than 2.2% in the 12 months from December, though represents an annual acceleration compared to the 1.3% annual lift recorded in January 2015. ‘In different parts of Scotland, powerful interplays between supply and demand are shaping the regional rent patterns that are emerging. In popular cities like Edinburgh where the jobs market is hottest the competition to find homes means tenants have to act quickly. As a result, we’re seeing exceptional rent growth in some parts of the country while in others, lettings market activity is much calmer,’ said Brian Moran, lettings director at Your Move Scotland. ‘However there’s also another ingredient added to the mix now. The private rented sector is in a state of uncertainty, as landlords wait with baited breath while the Private Tenancies Bill progresses through the Scottish Parliament. Nervous landlords may be acting now before their hands are tied, and they lose control of the rent they can charge. This could have prevented a seasonal dip between January and December instead of the steady picture we have seen,’ he explained. ‘Encouragingly, the latest rent rises are underpinned by good news. We should also be looking at tenants’ bottom line. Arrears are falling which speaks volumes for affordability right now. With rents below their price peak, many tenants have been seizing the opportunity to move out of season, while good deals are available,’ he added. On a regional basis three of the five regions of… Continue reading

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