Ealing Council has struck a deal to buy almost 200 homes at a housing development in Southall and rent them to council tenants.
The new homes are currently being built at Berkeley Homes’ Green Quarter development in the heart of Southall. They are expected to be finished and let by early autumn 2026.
The council is buying 180 homes from the developer, ranging from 1 to 3 bedrooms. The council will let all of these at genuinely affordable rates: 96 at social rent, with the remaining 84 at London Living Rent. Both of these rent packages are priced well within the budgets of local people on low incomes. On average, council rents cost less than a quarter of similar properties rented privately.
The council has used a combination of funding, including a grant from the Greater London Authority’s Affordable Homes Programme 2021-2026 and borrowing, to pay for the homes.
It marks a change of direction for the council, from buying new homes in bulk to providing urgently needed, affordable housing. The council is looking at doing more similar deals in the future.
The cost of housing in the borough makes it one of the country’s least affordable places to live. In recent years, an unprecedented number of people have asked for emergency help with housing. On average, the council has to provide temporary homes to around 3,000 families at a huge cost—and there are almost 8,000 households on the waiting list for a long-term council home.
Council leader Peter Mason said: “This is a bold and necessary step to ensure that local people have access to homes they can truly afford. Now, almost 200 local families will be able to start new lives in safe, modern homes by the end of next year. We’re proud to be leading the way in tackling the housing crisis head-on.”
Councillor Shital Manro, the council’s cabinet member for good growth and new homes, said: “This deal shows what’s possible when Ealing Council acts decisively on one of its key priorities and respond quickly to changing market conditions. It’s a fantastic outcome for some of the borough’s most vulnerable residents and goes a small way to addressing the housing crisis we are facing in the borough.”
© London West (powered by ukpropertyforums.com).
Sign up to receive our weekly free journal, The Forum here.