Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Family are refusing to move to make way for 3,500 new homes

EALING COUNCIL PLANS TO BULLDOZE THE TOWER BLOCK THE FAMILY LIVE IN AS PART OF AN £800 MILLION

- By LISA HASELDINE lisa.haseldine@reachplc.com @lisa_haseldine REGENERATI­ON PROJECT

AN Ealing family are refusing to let the council move them out of their home to make way for a new £800 million developmen­t.

Yacob Woldehiwot and his family do not want to leave their onebedroom flat on the South Acton Estate despite Ealing Council trying to push them out.

The council plans to bulldoze the tower block the family live in as part of an £800 million regenerati­on project that would build 3,463 new homes. In order to get residents on the estate to vacate their flats, the council offered to buy them, but Yacob refused to sell his flat.

Yacob, 50, claimed the reason he doesn’t want to move out of the flat, is because the council have undervalue­d the property at £285,000.

The father also said his family would not be able to buy another apartment in South Acton for that amount and so would be priced out of the area.

He argues that instead of demolishin­g the buildings on the South Acton Estate, they should just be refurbishe­d.

Speaking to the BBC for the programme Hanging On To Home: A Place Called Home, Yacob said: “Why should it be demolished without a valid reason? Because it could be refurbishe­d and there is no reason why it should be demolished.”

Yacob and his family, who moved to the estate thirteen years ago, are the only people living in their apartment block, something he said made him feel “vulnerable” and “unsafe”.

Yacob also claimed that, since the revamp project began, the council has neglected his apartment block, letting it become dirty.

BBC footage shows the stairwell of Yacob’s apartment block with dirt and bird poo on the stairs and grimy windows. One corner of the stairwell has what appears to be an active bird nest with an egg in it.

Because of his refusal to sell the property to them, Ealing Council issued Yacob with a compulsory purchase order, meaning they could buy the flat at any moment without his permission.

According to the BBC, over 400 residents have been moved from the estate since January 2016.

Yacob said: “I don’t think it is regenerati­on, it is gentrifica­tion that is happening because all the leaseholde­rs I know have moved out of the area.” There will be a public enquiry into Yacob’s case later this year.

A spokespers­on for Ealing Council told the BBC: “We are replacing the existing poor quality social housing with enough new, better quality homes to accommodat­e all existing residents who want to continue living on the estate. The majority of the [existing] homes have intrinsic and fundamenta­l design issues that refurbishm­ent would not address.

“The buy-back process, CPO Code and appointmen­t of independen­t valuers ensures leaseholde­rs receive full market value for their home, plus a generous package of compensati­on. Mr Woldehiwot is the only one whose approach has triggered a need to exercise our compulsory purchase powers.

“We will continue to attempt to engage and negotiate with Mr Woldehiwot. If it cannot be agreed between us, the value of his home and compensato­ry package payable will be determined at a tribunal.”

I don’t think it is regenerati­on, it is gentrifica­tion that is happening Yacob Woldehiwot

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 ?? BBC ONE ?? Yacob Woldehiwot looking out of his apartment onto the South Acton Estate
BBC ONE Yacob Woldehiwot looking out of his apartment onto the South Acton Estate

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