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Sensible comment on demolitions shocker June 24, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Housing economics, Housing markets, Media, Regeneration.
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Good to see someone commenting on this who has actually taken time to find out what’s happening. John Perry in Public Finance:

In the past few months alone, we have seen veteran journalist Sir Simon Jenkins in the Guardian and the programme Tonight with Trevor McDonald both attacking the notion of demolishing older houses. The Tonight programme, like several others, focused on what could be done by throwing money at one particular house, ignoring the problems of the wider area.

Meanwhile, Jenkins refers regularly to ‘Yvette Cooper’s proposal to demolish 150,000 Midlands and north country terrace houses’. Apart from the exaggeration, of which more later, there is the turn of phrase, which evokes stone-built cottages in Wensleydale rather than pokey two-up, two-down terraces in Liverpool or Stoke-on-Trent.

The prime mover against demolition has been the pressure group Save, whose assessment (on its website) is that as many as 400,000 houses will come down in the pathfinder areas. To those anxious to get on the housing ladder in the south of England, or who have invested their savings in modernising a terraced house, these figures must seem to be a travesty of housing policy. But put them under closer scrutiny, and the argument crumbles.

For a start, there are still something like 2.5 million Victorian terraced houses in England. The vast majority of these form excellent homes or can be modernised with some modest investment. But some are obsolete. That is, they are either too small, too badly designed or in too poor condition to be satisfactorily improved. Or – and this is often the case in the pathfinder areas – there are simply too many houses of the same type, age and size in the same place. For example, in Stoke-on-Trent, more than half of the housing stock is Victorian, consisting mainly of small, back-of-pavement terraces.

Sometimes, this kind of housing can be transformed and given a new niche in the housing market. As part of the local pathfinder programme, Urban Splash has converted 108 terraced houses in Salford into trendy ‘upside down’ units. There were long queues when they went on sale in April and they are now sold out. But this is redevelopment in all but name – the terraces were totally hollowed out and the yards and back alleys bulldozed. It is a tremendous example of regeneration but its effect depends in part on the scarcity value. Doing this to thousands of houses simply isn’t possible.

Opponents of demolition seem to forget that we do need to replace old houses at some point. The country currently replaces fewer than one in 1,000 houses each year – and most demolition is of tower blocks, not Victorian terraces. No-one – least of all the pathfinder agencies – is contemplating mass demolition. The aim must be selective renewal of the most difficult property, as part of the wider regeneration of poor neighbourhoods.

The other argument deployed by the critics is that local residents are up in arms against demolition plans. As Save says on its website: ‘Householders are being forced out of their beloved homes following minimal and often misinformed consultations.’ But the striking thing about many of the pathfinders is not the level of opposition, but the degree of support that they are obtaining for their renewal plans. Stoke and Hull provide two examples.

The Renew North Staffordshire pathfinder expects to replace just over 12,000 houses over 20 years. Although this might seem a lot, it also aims to refurbish or improve 63,000 houses and build 15,000 new ones. But there is no grand plan for demolition – the process is taking place at neighbourhood level, where master plans are being devised in conjunction with residents. One of the pathfinder’s innovations is the appointment of ‘residents’ friends’ in each area, answerable to the local Citizens Advice Bureau rather than to the council or the pathfinder. They help residents articulate their problems and give them independent advice. By putting unprecedented effort into involving residents, Renew is emerging with plans that have high proportions of local support – even from people whose houses might be demolished.

The Gateway pathfinder is more advanced with its renewal plans for some neighbourhoods in Hull – but still has support from residents. Houses have already been demolished, and local people are demanding faster replacement of the remaining boarded-up properties. Again, the pathfinder has used a variety of methods to find out local opinion and has high levels of support for what it is doing. It has adopted a ‘charter’, which sets out the promises made to local people. Residents engaged in the process have made a video showing their ambitions for their community. The level of support has convinced the local press, which is also calling for faster demolition of the worst houses.

The latest documentation on the pathfinders nationally – available on their websites or that of the Audit Commission – suggests that on current plans they will replace some 60,000 properties. Some further clearance might be planned in later phases, for which the pathfinders have yet to produce detailed plans. But it seems most unlikely that they will reach the total of 150,000 cited by [Simon] Jenkins, much less the absurd maximum put forward by Save. And this is over a period of up to 15 years, including of course many thousands of unpopular postwar developments as well as the cherished ‘north country terraces’. To put the figures in perspective, the pathfinders cover in total more than three-quarters of a million homes.

Comments»

1. Rob - June 24, 2006

That’s a great find, thanks for sharing!

2. Roger Dodger - June 25, 2006

The writer is obviously a political propagandist hack. The 400,000 is from the Brendan Nevin CURS report that launched the Pathfinders…

from Select Committee on Office of the Deputy Prime Minister: Housing, Planning, Local Government and the Regions -:- Written Evidence -:- Memorandum by The Pathfinder Chairs (EMP 20) — “7.2 The Northern Way makes the point that the quality of housing is simply not good enough to support the North’s economic potential. It quotes the CURS [The Centre for Urban and Regional Studies] estimate that perhaps **400,000 houses** should be replaced, though it accepts that others would provide a lower estimate.”

And he obviously has no idea what is going on in Stoke, and has probably never set foot in the city.

3. Roger Dodger - June 25, 2006

“By putting unprecedented effort into involving residents, Renew is emerging with plans that have high proportions of local support – even from people whose houses might be demolished.”

Complete bollocks.

From the local newspaper in Stoke, Renew’s patch…

“the council said most residents were in favour of the scheme [for mass demolition of an area of 250 terrace homes]. A questionnaire returned by 93 tenants, landlords and homeowners found 64 per cent wanted clearance instead of refurbishment. … Where a property was rented, the council sent one questionnaire to the tenant and another to the landlord.”

So they double-counted, based on a pitiful response rate – and then used that in the press and flyers as a ‘valid reason’ to declare a mass clearance area.

4. Roger Dodger - June 25, 2006

From Inside Housing, 23rd Jun 06…

“Birmingham Sandwell’s housing market renewal pathfinder has performed so badly that the Audit Commission warned that it could put the reputation of the entire national programme at risk.

In a draft report published in error by the Audit Commission on its website this week, the inspectorate said there was a risk that Urban Living’s work could actually make neighbourhoods more fragile and further polarise existing communities.

There was also no evidence to show how the pathfinder had determined whether to refurbish or demolish houses, it said.”

And this is the very Pathfinder area which Brendan Nevin, whose report triggered the schemes, said is a shining example of the policy’s success.

5. Brickonomist - June 25, 2006

Thanks for the comments Roger, though I have to say I’m not convinced. The 400,000 figure turned up once in a speculative early scoping document and, as John Perry points out and as you should know, does not bear any relation to the actual plans of the pathfinders. The story from Stoke doesn’t suggest any particulary strong opposition to the pathfinder, and the performance of the Birmingham one, while worrying, shouldn’t be used to denigrate pathfinders which don’t have the same problems.

And finally, you do yourself no favours by calling John Perry “obviously a political propagandist hack”. He’s one of the most respected and authoritative housing experts out there (co-author of the housing finance bible, for example) and a former policy director of the Chartered Institute of Housing.

6. Simon Fairlie - November 18, 2006

If you want 5,000 words of local testimony about what people in Salford think of the Pathfinder and Urban Splash schemes, go to http://salfordstar.blogspot.com/