Evening Standard

Experts tell Chancellor: We need £300m for prefabs in the capital

- Kate Proctor Political Reporter

PLANNING experts are asking the Chancellor for £300 million for prefab homes to help tackle London’s housing crisis.

Chancellor Phillip Hammond is being asked to find funds for factory-built housing — first popularise­d in the Fifties — in addition to a £5 billion homes package set to be announced in the Budget tomorrow.

The homes, built off-site, can be moved into constraine­d plots and completed in half the time of traditiona­l builds.

Nicky Gavron, chair of the London Assembly planning committee, has written a cross-party letter to the Chancellor requesting more funds. It is backed by housebuild­ers and government advisers. She said: “We have never reached high housing targets in the past without a significan­t contributi­on of factory-built homes. If the Gov- ernment wants to build 300,000 a year they will have to invest in this.”

In London, 28-storey Apex House in Wembley was completed in nine months by Vision Modular Systems. Another new block with a prefabrica­ted frame is 1 Dalston Lane, set to house dozens of flats and shops over the Crossrail 2 tunnel.

However, the Government must speed up this approach, according to Mark Farmer, who wrote an independen­t report on the benefits of modular housing. He said Treasury officials “need to get their heads around this and put concrete measures in place to create truly additional capacity”.

Alongside Conservati­ve, Lib Dem and Green leaders in the London Assembly, Ms Gavron is asking the Treasury to put £300 million extra into the Accelerate­d Constructi­on Fund which Mayor Sadiq Khan can access. Ms Gavron believes 20 per cent of new homes in London could be factory-built.

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