Workingman wrote:Kaz wrote:We need more social housing. Rentable, decent, regulated and not in the hands of private landlords.
Exactly!
I can only speak for Leeds but I bet most former industrial cities, Sheffield, Manchester, Birmingham etc. are much the same. The city centre is thriving yet all around it there are former factory sites and obsolete light industrial units sitting there covered in bushes, shrubs and weeds doing nothing. Well I say nothing, they are more like fly-tipping central. The thing is that all major utilities are already there if only there was the will...
The other side of the coin is that I live right on the edge, on the A660. Bramhope lies just a few kilometres away and at its end there are approved strip developments for 319 and 425 homes, respectively. At my end we have seen some 180 of these over the last two years. The homes? Three, four and five bed detached houses all at eye watering prices. Go figure.
Well, this is certainly part of it. Liverpool in 2014 had a population of 467,000. In 1931 it was 856,00, in 1961 747,000. The population has dropped, there is room for houses.
http://www.demographia.com/db-ukcities.htmThere are a lot of derelict properties in Liverpool, a lot of ex-industrial units standing empty. So you could build houses in Liverpool, or Leeds, or Middlesboro. But it's not happening. Maybe because people want to go where the jobs are, where there is a reason to go.
What is happening is that especially in Kaz's part of the world, people are tacking on large numbers of houses at the edge of nice areas and charging eye-watering prices for them.