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Community Land Trust

Southgate Cohousing

27 September 2018

St Clements,
London CLT

27 September 2018

London’s first Community Land Trust providing genuinely affordable homes in London and keeping them affordable in perpetuity.  

Number of homes 23 genuinely affordable homes
Location Mile End
Stage Completed 2017

How they formed
London CLT was born out of the community organising efforts of Citizens UK in response to the need for genuinely affordable homes in London. London CLT is registered as a Community Benefit Society and is governed by its members. Anyone who lives in London can buy a £1 share and become a member. This gives a vote at the AGM, and the ability to stand for election to the board. The prominent former St Clements hospital site became the focus of campaigns by Citizens UK and London CLT members in 2009. The Greater London Authority, who owned St Clements, agreed to explore possibilities for a CLT on the site.

Securing the site
The GLA ran a competitive bidding process for the site in the early 2010s. London CLT was part of a consortium led by Igloo Regeneration. Their bid included a widespread community-led design process, and genuinely affordable homes in perpetuity. The consortium lost the bid, however the support for a CLT, meant the GLA asked the successful developer, Galliford Try, to see if they could work with London CLT. A partnership was formed after several exploratory conversations.

Design and construction
The site was developed by Linden Homes, part of the Galliford Try group. The scheme provides 252 new homes. The section 106 planning obligation required 35% of these to be affordable, including 58 for social rent managed by Peabody, and 23 Community Land Trust homes. The freehold of the site was to be transferred to a community foundation which collects ground rents for charitable purposes.
London CLT held community design sessions with the developer’s architects, John Thompson & Partners to develop local people’s ideas for the site. The CLT also looked at ‘meanwhile uses’ on the site before the homes were built and held the Shuffle festival which uses culture to bring people together.

Finance and affordability
Providing genuinely affordable homes and keeping them affordable in perpetuity required a unique solution. London CLT bought each home through a back-to-back mortgage arrangement once they were built. Essentially, this means each resident’s mortgage is used by the CLT to buy each home, meaning no borrowing was required by the CLT.
The sale price of each CLT home is directly linked to median incomes in Tower Hamlets, not their market value. This resulted in £130,000 for a 1 bedroom flat, £182,000 for a 2 bed and £235,000 for a 3 bed. This is around one third of their market value.
The CLT residents can sell the property on to another household identified by the CLT at any point, but only at a price linked directly to local incomes. This arrangement means that residents buying with an initial discount receive a diminished financial return when they sell. It removes housing market speculation from the house price and keeps all 23 homes permanently affordable by local people.

Living there
The first CLT residents moved in 2017. An independent CLT panel selected the home-owners, taking account of housing need, local connection and ability to secure a mortgage, as set out in the CLT’s allocation policy. Each household raises their own mortgage, and buys the home fully (at a discount to market value).
The CLT is working with residents to create a cohesive community at St. Clement’s, and to make use of the community space in the John Denham building for events and activities. Residents will take a leading role in how the site and community space is run. Shuffle has become a successful festival and continues in the neighbouring Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park.

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Christchurch Road

27 September 2018

London CLT have secured a Transport for London owned site through the GLA’s Small Sites Small Builders programme, to deliver affordable homes linked to local incomes.

The site has a complicated planning history, where conventional housing is unlikely to be permitted, although widespread community support for affordable housing could allow homes to be provided where they otherwise wouldn’t.

Visit their website

Springbank Court

27 September 2018

Resident-led housing organisation Phoenix Community Homes, have built 8 new homes on Riverpark Gardens. The new homes are a mix of 1, 2 and 3-bedroom apartments and situated close to Ravensbourne station, overlooking the Ravensbourne River. They became available for shared ownership early in 2019.

Phoenix have an active pipeline of developments, including the recently completed award winning Hazelhurst Court scheme.

 
Visit their website

Naked House

27 September 2018

Delivering 22 units of resale price capped sub-market units in Enfield, built to the bare minimum allowing residents to adapt their homes over time.  

Number of homes 22 resale price capped sub-market homes
Location Ponders End
Stage Planning Permitted 2022

How they formed
Established by four young Londoners in 2013, who couldn’t afford to buy and were uninspired by expensive shared ownership flats with fixtures and fittings they didn’t want. They wanted to be part of solving their own housing issues by contributing to their homes and realised they could open this out to others in their situation, so-called ‘generation rent’.
Naked House is a not-for profit Community Interest Company Limited by Guarantee. It is managed by its founding directors and governed by a board which includes industry experts and representatives from a membership of potential residents.

Securing sites
Naked House is in the final stages of securing 3 council owned former garage sites in Enfield on an affordable basis to build 22 homes.

Design and construction
The project should start on site in 2019. Houses will be completed, so they are secure, watertight and habitable, as well as planning, building regs, and mortgage compliant. There will be a kitchen sink, a basic bathroom, heating and the start of electrics and lighting, but no other finishes, fittings or partitions. This allows people to create and adapt their own home over time, either doing the work themselves or paying builders.
Following a competition, Naked House have appointed OMMX as architects. Their design is sympathetic to the suburban character of the sites. The basic structure and shell are well designed, low carbon, and thermally efficient to reduce energy consumption. It also allows for maximum extension and adaptability, so people can choose how they want to live. Naked House will work with residents with a fit-out manual and skills programme to ensure purchasers know what they can and can’t do. The leases will also contain clauses controlling future adaptations.

Finance and affordability
Naked House will use grant funding from the GLA and development finance which will be paid back through purchaser’s mortgages. Working with councils to get land on an affordable basis allows homes to be genuinely affordable for those with a household annual income of between £25-90k. The homes never cost more than a third of gross income. Homes will be priced at around 65-70% of the full market value in Enfield. The lowest cost homes will be genuinely affordable for those on the London median wage or below. As a not-for profit, construction savings will also be passed onto purchasers.
Any discount received by the initial purchaser is locked into the lease through a resale covenant. The home can still rise or fall in line with the market, or with improvements, but always at the same level below market. This ensures the discount is locked in for future generations whilst recognising the ‘sweat equity’ of purchasers.

Living there
Naked House is for the ‘intermediate’ market who don’t qualify for social housing but are unable to afford a home on the open market. An eligibility and allocation policy will be agreed with the Council. This will typically prioritise first-time buyers who live and/or work in the borough and can demonstrate need, an ability to afford mortgage repayments, and a willingness to customise the home. By giving people a stake in their home, and responsibility over a community garden, a shared workshop, and long-term management, the shared journey of adapting homes should bring people together from the start.

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