A £100m project to deliver hundreds of new council houses across County Durham has taken a major step forward, with the appointment of a delivery partner.
Durham County Council is planning to provide 500 properties, a mix of bungalows and houses that will be truly affordable and let on secure tenancies, and has appointed Bishop Auckland company T. Manners to help deliver them.
Cllr James Rowlandson, the council’s Cabinet member for resources, investments and assets, said: “We are in the midst of a national housing crisis. Not enough properties are being built to meet demand – including the need for affordable housing – and many families are struggling financially in the wake of the recent spikes in inflation and interest rates. County Durham is no different to the rest of the country in that regard and that is why we have taken up the government’s invitation for councils to address the shortage.
“We are looking to deliver 500 properties across County Durham, with a mix of bungalows and houses, for the benefit of local people and those in housing need. This programme will see an investment in the county of around £100m – a significant boost for our economy. It will protect existing jobs and create new jobs in the construction industry, and associated supply chain.
“In keeping with our County Durham Pound project, the ability to drive long-term social, economic and environmental benefits, or social value, is fundamentally important to us. It’s great therefore to be working in partnership with a locally owned family business to deliver this ambitious programme, which will make a significant difference to those in housing need across the county.
“We look forward to announcing more details of this exciting programme as the sites we are planning to develop progress.”
The council disposed of its housing stock in 2015 to County Durham Housing Group, now Believe housing. In recent times, the number of affordable properties built in County Durham has not matched the identified need – 836 houses per year. In the five years between 2017/18 and 2021/22, the number of new affordable properties delivered (2,647) was 36.7 per cent below the number needed (4,180). The council’s new programme will see houses built mainly on land already in the authority’s ownership.