Last weekend a group of young professionals moved into a
new development in London’s Stratford East.
But they had not rented their own home in Stratford. Instead, the group of
housing campaigners had entered the development to hold a party in protest
at the government’s failure to tackle the rising cost of rent — and role of
social landlords in that failure. The
development in question was an apartment block designed for private rent on the
open market, but built and managed by Genesis Housing Group, a social housing
provider. Rents on a two-bedroom property reportedly start at £1,700 a month.
Based on affordability criteria set out by housing charity Shelter (roughly,
that housing costs should only consume 35 per cent of take home pay) these
properties would only be affordable to families with an income of £76,000. This
is not the first housing protest that London has seen, and direct action will
rise in line with rents. But it is arguably the most important: it is the first
indication that social landlords may be conspiring in their own demise. Read
more on the Spectator website.
John Judge obituary
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As chief quantity surveyor at Manchester city council, my father, John
Judge, who has died aged 91, was part of a team that led the city’s
housebuilding ...
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