Empty homes reach 10-year low
8 Apr 2014 03:22 PM
The numbers of empty properties in England have
fallen to a 10-year low, new figures show.
Communities Secretary Eric Pickles welcomed the news as
“a significant achievement”.
The
latest data shows that as of October 2013, there were 635,127 empty homes
across the country, down by around a fifth since 2009 and their lowest level
since 2004.
But
Mr Pickles especially welcomed the dramatic drop in the numbers of long-term
vacant properties, which fell by around a third over the past 4 years, from
316,251 in 2009 to 216,050 in 2013.
Turning empty properties into homes
Delivering more homes is a key part of the
government’s long-term economic plan and with this in mind ministers have
introduced a wide range of measures to bring back into use homes that have
stood empty and unused for years.
This includes:
-
a
£235 million empty homes funding programme, which will deliver 12,000
homes from empty properties by March 2015 – with apprenticeships on offer
to make this happen
-
rewarding councils for bringing empty homes back into
use through the New Homes Bonus – since April 2011, councils have
received over £2.2 billion for bringing over 93,000 empty homes back into
use, which they can then use to benefit the wider community
-
giving councils new powers to remove Council Tax
subsidies to empty homes, and use the funds to keep the overall rate of Council
Tax down
-
cancelling the Pathfinder programme which sought to
demolish homes, instead focusing on refurbishment and getting empty homes into
use
Communities Secretary Eric Pickles
said:
Empty properties can blight entire neighbourhoods,
becoming a magnet for antisocial behaviour when they should be family
homes.
So
I’m pleased to see that the efforts we’ve made to bring these homes
back into use have helped bring the numbers down to a 10-year low, with the
number of long-term empty homes down by around a third since
2009.
This is on top of the wider efforts we’re making
to get the country building, with 420,000 new homes delivered since 2010
– including 170,000 affordable homes.
Communities Minister Stephen Williams
said:
I’m delighted to see the numbers of empty homes in
this country at their lowest for a decade.
This is a significant achievement, which is not only
delivering more homes but also creating more jobs and apprenticeships, leading
to both a stronger economy and a fairer society as these properties are
renovated.
I
look forward to seeing how councils and communities build on this success in
the coming year.
Further Information
New
figures on empty homes.
Since 2010, the government has delivered 420,000 new
homes, including 170,000 affordable homes. This includes:
-
£19.5 billion public and private investment in
an Affordable
Homes Programme from 2010, with a further £23 billion investment
planned from 2015 to deliver 165,000 new affordable homes
-
the Help to Buy scheme,
which is so far helping 28,000 households buy newly-built homes with a fraction
of the deposit they would normally require – leading developers have said
they will build more as a direct result of this increased
demand
-
the £1 billion Build to Rent scheme, to deliver
newly-built homes specifically for private rent. Work is already underway on
developments in Southampton and Manchester through this heavily-oversubscribed
scheme, which is well on track to have work underway on up to 10,000 new homes
by 2015
Photo above by stevekeiretsu on Flickr. Used under Creative
Commons.