Yorkshire Post

Our streets are turning grey as young priced out

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SOMETHING STRANGE and rather sad is happening in my corner of Yorkshire – gradually, it’s becoming an enclave for the middle-aged and elderly.

Where once the streets were full of parents taking young children to school in the mornings, now there are few of them, and most of the people out and about early are the retired heading out to buy their newspaper.

This is Britain’s housing problem in microcosm – younger people priced out of a neighbourh­ood of modest, onceafford­able homes.

And it’s not healthy for the neighbourh­ood, or any of us who live here. Communitie­s need new blood and a mix of age groups if they are to thrive.

But if the trend where I live continues, it is going to look very like a purpose-built retirement community in a few years’ time.

The change has happened slowly over the past decade, but it has been inexorable.

Mine is by no means one of the elite residentia­l areas of Yorkshire that attract premium prices. Even so, the cost of buying here has risen beyond the means of many younger people, even if they mortgage themselves to the hilt.

That has changed the area’s character for the worse. These properties were typically the second homes that couples bought. Having started with a flat or a small terrace, now they were stepping up to a three or fourbedroo­m semi with a garden and enough space for a family to grow and play.

New neighbours were usually in their late 20s or early 30s, both working, and often with a child of pre-school age.

Everything points to it being an attractive area for families – in the catchment area of good schools within easy walking distance, close to a park, sports pitches, a swimming pool and a vibrant parade of local shops.

Yet the steady influx of new families has slowed to a trickle. As houses come up for sale, the buyers are tending to be older and more affluent, their children having grown up and left home. And with their arrival, the average age of the neighbourh­ood creeps steadily upwards.

I’m not the only long-time resident to have noticed this. Neighbours have too, like a retired couple a few doors away who, having bought young and brought their own children up here, sold to move closer to them.

They assumed the people coming to view the house would be young couples, but of the half-a-dozen appointmen­ts that resulted in offers, only one family fitted that descriptio­n.

The rest – including the eventual buyers – were on the verge of retirement themselves.

This scenario is bound to be replicated across Yorkshire, and it is one of increasing­ly ageing neighbourh­oods.

It is also a story of a generation of younger people unable to lead complete lives, prevented by rising property prices last month in a report by The Resolution Foundation thinktank.

It found that in West Yorkshire, home ownership amongst the 25 to 34 age group has fallen by 52 per cent since the mid-1990s. The rest of the county is not far behind, at 43 per cent.

Those are worrying statistics. They tell a story of people stuck on an expensive merry-go-round of renting, or having little choice but to continue living with parents long after they wish to fly the coop.

The problem lies in what to do about it. Building more affordable homes, which has the support of all the major political parties, will help younger people get a foot on the property ladder and eventually move on to somewhere larger.

But that will take years to happen, and in the meantime neighbourh­oods like mine grow steadily older and less vigorous.

There are many facets to Britain’s housing problems, and we overlook the potential loss of the vibrant and healthy mix of age groups that holds communitie­s together at our peril.

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