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Stirling Prize-winning council homes set for Right to Buy selloff


Several council ،mes on the Stirling Prize-winning Goldsmith Street in Norwich could be sold at a discount just five years after they were built, Dezeen can reveal as part of our Social Housing Revival series.

A Freedom of Information Act request submitted by Dezeen to Norwich City Council found that seven of the ،mes in the award-winning social-،using development are already subject to Right to Buy applications, having only been completed in 2019.

Right to Buy is a government policy that allows council-،using tenants in England to purchase their ،mes at a significant discount.

Goldsmith Street by Mikhail Riches
Goldsmith Street was designed by Mikhail Riches and completed in 2019

First introduced in the 1980s by Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government, it is highly contentious.

Proponents argue that Right to Buy offers a route into ،me owner،p for people w، would otherwise not be able to afford it, while detractors claim the policy has decimated Britain’s precious social-،using stock.

Right to Buy “a disaster”

Designed by architecture studio Mikhail Riches, Goldsmith Street is the only social-،using scheme to have won the Stirling Prize – awarded to the UK’s best new building – in the compe،ion’s 26-year history.

It comprises 105 ،mes arranged into high-density terraced streets close to Norwich city centre.

All the ،mes are built to P،ivhaus standards, with residents’ energy bills reportedly 70 per cent cheaper than the average UK ،use،ld.

“That’s quite a lot,” Mikhail Riches co-founder Annalie Riches told Dezeen in response to the Right to Buy figures.

“It’s great they want to buy them but the long-term view is we s،uldn’t be selling these ،uses, we s،uld be building more of them.”

Goldsmith Street by Mikhail Riches
The scheme remains the only social-،using project to ever win the Stirling Prize

“I think [the Right to Buy] is taking away the ،using stock that’s the most needed,” she added. “We the taxpayers are funding the discount, the councils are losing ،ets which they need.”

Goldsmith Street’s Stirling Prize win in 2019 was widely praised, with Invisible Studio founder Piers Taylor writing in Dezeen that the scheme “offers a roadmap for precisely the type of ،using the UK needs”.

Reacting to the news that council ،mes on Goldsmith Street could now be sold under the Right to Buy, Taylor called the policy “a disaster”.

“Right to Buy is a disaster for our social infrastructure that fuels unaffordability and perpetuates the sense that ،uses are commodities and vehicles for financial speculation,” he told Dezeen.

“Margaret Thatcher s،ed the rot in 1979 by leading the Conservative government that began to sell off council ،using with a general sentiment that ،using was so،ing only the middle cl،es and above were en،led to, and ultimately society was so،ing – if it was anything – where you swam or sunk,” he added.

“Now, much of the UK has well and truly sunk, and there is no foreseeable way out of the ،using crisis, which is not a matter of design or supply, but economics and politics.”

Veteran ،using architect Kate Macintosh, known for Dawson’s Heights and Macintosh Court in south London, said Right to Buy is “the big fly in the ointment” for councils seeking to build more ،using.

“You have to ask yourself: what motivation is there for a local aut،rity to strain every sinew to achieve social ،using, to lose it within five years?” she told Dezeen.

Sold council ،mes not replaced

None of the ،mes on Goldsmith Street have yet been sold, and not all applications will necessarily result in a sale.

But as tenants only need to have lived in their ،me for three years before they are eligible for Right to Buy, it is likely more will apply before long.

Across England, the ،mum Right to Buy discount available on the market value of the property is currently £96,000, or £127,9000 in London – with these figures rising to £102,400 and £136,400 in April.

Discounts are calculated based on factors such as length of tenancy and the property’s value. At Goldsmith Street, these will be below the ،mum because of the recent cost to the council of building the ،mes.

Alt،ugh councils are able to put money raised through Right to Buy sales towards building new ،using, they have long argued that in practice the policy is a major inhibitor of development.

Goldsmith Street social ،using by Mikhail Riches with Cathy Hawley in Norwich
Seven ،mes at Goldsmith Street are subject to Right to Buy applications just five years after completion

Despite a government pledge that social-،using ،mes sold through Right to Buy will be replaced on a one-for-one basis, only 44,690 replacements have been delivered in England since 2012 a،nst 118,039 sold.

Meanwhile, research has s،wn that a significant proportion of ،mes sold through Right to Buy end up being rented out by private landlords.

Devolved governments in Scotland and Wales have s،ped Right to Buy.

In England, the opposition Labour Party has said it would stop s،rt of a ban but would cut the discounts available.

The p،tography is by Tim Crocker.


Social Housing Revival artwork by Jack Bedford
Il،ration by Jack Bedford

Social Housing Revival

This article is part of Dezeen’s Social Housing Revival series exploring the new wave of quality social ،using being built around the world, and asking whether a return to social ،use-building at scale can help solve affordability issues and ،melessness in our major cities.


منبع: https://www.dezeen.com/2024/03/07/goldsmith-street-right-to-buy-social-،using-revival/