Originally posted by ahinton
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Housing
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amateur51
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Originally posted by french frank View Post...Thatcher forced councils into giveaway prices and then legislated to stop the councils reinvesting even the paltry revenues in new housing stock.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post...What's the evidence that there is so much property in need of renovation that doing so would go any way to sorting out the local authority waiting list?...
But the misguided HMRI was based on the premise that 'renewal' couldn't happen unless the old housing stock was pulled down.
(This of course is the option preferred by builders, since the government bowed to pressure from them and cut VAT on newbuild, leaving it in place for renovations.)
Anyone who wants to be reminded of the arguments could do worse than attend the enquiry into the Welsh Streets that started in Liverpool last Tuesday.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostEh? What have I missed ? Someone did own the property - the public. But Thatcher forced councils into giveaway prices and then legislated to stop the councils reinvesting even the paltry revenues in new housing stock.
So - C minus to Thatcher for the ways in which this was done, for sure, but not every aspect of it was wrong in principle.
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amateur51
Originally posted by jean View PostThere's plenty of it around these parts.
But the misguided HMRI was based on the premise that 'renewal' couldn't happen unless the old housing stock was pulled down.
(This of course is the option preferred by builders, since the government bowed to pressure from them and cut VAT on newbuild, leaving it in place for renovations.)
Anyone who wants to be reminded of the arguments could do worse than attend the enquiry into the Welsh Streets that started in Liverpool last Tuesday.
Later: Riverside Housing, I think
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostRenovation has been tried certainly to my knowledge since the 1970s but do you mean privately-owned or publicly-owned properties.
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWhat's the evidence that there is so much property in need of renovation that doing so would go any way to sorting out the local authority waiting list? I don't mean there isn't any, I'm just interested in up-to-date data.
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as you go into Bath on the A36 from Bristol, (thats posh expensive Bath, somerset, world heritage city), there is a vast derelict industial estate building, empty since 2007 and a huge (I mean REALLY big) derelict bakery(I think ) site. Both walking distance to the city. Used properly, they could be developed into many hundreds or good quality housing units, with work close to hand.
Makes me sad each time I drive past.
Shouldnt be beyond the wit of a rich nation to make this happen.
kinda depends on the folks at the top wanting it to happen though.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postas you go into Bath on the A36 from Bristol, (thats posh expensive Bath, somerset, world heritage city), there is a vast derelict industial estate building, empty since 2007 and a huge (I mean REALLY big) derelict bakery(I think ) site. Both walking distance to the city. Used properly, they could be developed into many hundreds or good quality housing units, with work close to hand.
Makes me sad each time I drive past.
Shouldnt be beyond the wit of a rich nation to make this happen.
kinda depends on the folks at the top wanting it to happen though.
The old Stothert & Pitt site between Windsor Bridge and the site of Sainsbury's/Homebase between the Lower and Upper Bristol Roads in Bath is being developed as a massive housing project with houses and apartments up to just below £800,000 but, I understand, with the usual obligation upon developers to include a certain proportion of "low cost housing" which, of course, in Bath, is a joke because there's no such thing!
See http://www.crestnicholson.com/bathriverside/
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostBoth; just as new housing stock requires investment from both sectors, so the properties to be renovated to provide a proportion of them should be owned by both.
That I cannot provide right now, but there is quite an amount of derelict and semi-derelict property, especially in inner cities, that could be commandeered for such a purpose and some of it has already been renovated to make new homes; the problem for some people is that a disproportionate amount of this has been done by the private sector in turning disused warehouses, factories and the like into fantastically expensive pads for the wealthy, which obviously goes only a little way to addressing the problem, especially given that the problem itself principally affects those who are least able to afford either to rent or to purchase their homes.
And while we're at it, we need to build-in 'life-time' homes and Green/eco-friendly considerations too.
Keynes would be proud of us
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amateur51
Originally posted by teamsaint View Postas you go into Bath on the A36 from Bristol, (thats posh expensive Bath, somerset, world heritage city), there is a vast derelict industial estate building, empty since 2007 and a huge (I mean REALLY big) derelict bakery(I think ) site. Both walking distance to the city. Used properly, they could be developed into many hundreds or good quality housing units, with work close to hand.
Makes me sad each time I drive past.
Shouldnt be beyond the wit of a rich nation to make this happen.
kinda depends on the folks at the top wanting it to happen though.
Whatever happened to Nosher Pickles' 'localism'?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI'm sure you're right but I wouldn't want to get into the distraction of an either/or argument - it has to be an 'and' solution.
And while we're at it, we need to build-in 'life-time' homes and Green/eco-friendly considerations too.
Keynes would be proud of us
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI don't see the dream of home ownership as a problem. A really good, affordable, civilised rental sector would start to rebalance how we view ownership/rental anyway.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe public did not own the property; the local authorities did. They are not the public; they are funded by the public and by any profits that they can achieve on funds provided by the public.
I have no time for the way in which Thatcher handled this; it was quite obviously wrong on many counts. That said, the principle of allowing local authority tenants to purchase their homes was not in and of itself wrong and to give such tenants discounts based upon the length of their tenancies did not seem to me to be especially unfair either; after all, the saving to the local authority would not just be in attracting the purchase funds but also in no longer having to maintain and insure the properties once they'd been sold.
Forcing local authorities not to reinvest those savings in new housing stock does indeed seem unreasonable on the face of it, but a viable alternative could have been to forcing them to ensure that those monies were spent in other ways to the benefit of the investors (i.e. the council tax payers) by allocating them to other services that they (those local authorities) provide.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
Whatever happened to Nosher Pickles' 'localism'?
Next stop Heathrow...
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