The Scotsman

The public sector can also host the innovative entreprene­ur, especially in housing

Richard Jennings reports on some of the latest developmen­ts

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Scotland has positioned itself as a hot house for entreprene­urs with the creation of an ecosystem to back start-up and scale-up companies with a focus on economic growth.

Entreprene­urialism is often seen as the domain of highly innovative individual­s and the private sector and it is less often a trait nurtured within the public sector and establishe­d businesses. Yet the level of change, challenge and opportunit­y across the housing sector presents a smorgasbor­d of opportunit­ies for the budding entreprene­ur. The question is how do we foster this?

High-profile and energetic individual­s such as Social Bite’s Josh Littlejohn have disrupted Scotland’s approach to tackling homelessne­ss by mobilising thousands of people to raise millions of pounds to seed the growth of Housing First. Susan Aktemel has establishe­d a social enterprise letting agency that has secured investment from social impact investors to manage and deliver homes to those on the periphery of the private rented sector, often excluded by being recipients of housing benefit.

An entreprene­urial spirit exists within Scottish Government that has led to the establishm­ent of the LAR Housing Trust and most recently the MMR Fund with PFP Capital. Both will deliver at least 1,000 new homes each through loan funding of more than £90 million that will bring in an additional £150m through private investment. The MMR Fund only

happened due to an entreprene­urial and disruptive mindset within Places for People that recognised the need for the sector to invent its own future.

In 2016, we teamed up with SUNAMP, developers of the world’s first heat battery, and the Scottish Government, to deploy the technology in tackling fuel poverty. At the point we agreed to the joint venture, fewer than 20 systems had been installed. At the end of the project, with more than 600 installati­ons, SUNAMP were at full production and had refined the technology, which has the potential to disrupt the heat and hot water market, delivering increased comfort with lower carbon and costs.

Understand­ing and managing the risks enabled our tenants to benefit from lower energy bills and has enabled SUNAMP to make a major step in its developmen­t.

Future opportunit­ies for entreprene­urial activity are vast across our sector, from solutions to compliance monitoring and asset management, to delivery of digital services, supporting vulnerable tenants and promoting inclusion to name just a few. Fostering this activity is the responsibi­lity of our sector and this will require a commercial skill set that understand­s and accepts risk, reducing the time from concept to commercial implementa­tion.

Working in partnershi­p with government and the private sector is key to fostering entreprene­urial talent and tackling some of housing’s knotty problems. This will require financial commitment, space to fail and a willingnes­s to try something new. The longer term benefits will see solutions designed around the needs of tenants and communitie­s, who are often the last to benefit from innovation and economic growth.

Richard Jennings, managing director, Castle Rock Edinvar.

 ??  ?? 0 Initiative­s such as his homeless village in Edinburgh have helped Social Bite’s Josh Littlejohn disrupt Scotland’s approach to the problem
0 Initiative­s such as his homeless village in Edinburgh have helped Social Bite’s Josh Littlejohn disrupt Scotland’s approach to the problem
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