More shops could be converted into homes in building rules shake-up

Business

Takeaways and betting shops could be converted into homes more easily as the government launches a review of extensions, conversions and renovations.

In proposals to be formally announced on Monday, new freedoms to enlarge existing homes will also be outlined.

The idea is to make it easier to “build upwards and outwards, with new extensions and loft conversions”, the levelling up department said.

There will be “new flexibilities to convert shops, takeaways and betting shops into homes”, while the rules on extensions to commercial buildings and warehouses will be “eased” to “make better use of brownfield”.

It is suggested that red tape be cut to “enable barn conversions and repurpose agricultural buildings as opposed to building on the countryside”.

Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said new homes must be of the “right type and targeted in the right places”.

They must also be built in “inner cities so that we protect our countryside”, he added.

Better use must be made of buildings that already exist, he said, so that empty shops and offices are not “gathering dust”.

Read more:
Average asking rental price hits record high for homes
Flooded development offers insight into housing crisis

Rent increases

Shadow levelling up secretary Lisa Nandy criticised the proposals, describing the review as a “drop in the ocean compared to what is needed to fix the housing crisis”.

She added: “We don’t need more reviews or press releases, we need bold action to get Britain building.

“That’s why Labour has set out plans to reform the planning system to build the homes we need.

“We will restore housing targets, reform compulsory purchase rules and take the tough choices to back the builders, not the blockers.”

Labour is also promising to stop foreign buyers “purchasing swathes of new housing developments off plan”.

Articles You May Like

Police arrest teenagers after stolen car crashes and catches fire at end of 100mph chase
Liberty Energy stock jumps after Trump picks CEO Chris Wright as energy secretary
Billionaire Gautam Adani charged in New York with massive fraud, bribery scheme
Nvidia to report third-quarter earnings after the bell
Minister’s assisted dying intervention is explosive – and potentially embarrassing for PM