The Scotsman

Working together is helping tenants to put their own houses in order

Ed Mayo urges a spirit of co-operation as a way to create a desirable place to live

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Housingco-opshavemuc­h to offer. They deliver affordable housing when many people are being priced out of the market. They help to create, and build powerful communitie­s and offer tenants far greater control over the things that matter most to them.

The evidence in our new report, Shared Space: How Scottish Housing Co-ops Build Communitie­s, is compelling – housing co-ops are making a very positive difference to tenants across Scotland.

The housing co-op in West Whitlawbur­n, Cambuslang, south of Glasgow, is 30 years old this year. Before the co-op took over, there was a high turnover of tenants in the tower block flats on an estate ravaged by drugs and crime.

Within five years, the co-op had turned that around to increase demand and reduce turnover – and that’s still the case 25 years later.

The co-op achieved this by taking time to understand what tenants wanted. Their top priority was security – and new entry systems, concierge services and cameras made them feel much more secure.

Later, the flats were given new exterior cladding and the insides refurbishe­d significan­tly. Residents felt safer in warmer, more attractive homes. Anne Anderson, chair of the Management Committee at West Whitlawbur­n – who has lived on the estate for 40 years – says in the report: “As a co-op, it is definitely a much better environmen­t, a better place to live. It’s not just about security and better homes – one real difference between the council and co-op is that you always know who you’re talking to. It’s much more of a community.”

Edinburgh Student Housing Co-op (ESHC) is very different to West Whitlawbur­n, but offers equally significan­t benefits to its 106 residents – not least a rent of £322 per month (including all utilities, wi-fi and basic cleaning products) against a typical Edinburgh student rent of £550-plus and up to £1000 in the growing luxury end of the market.

Most student housing is either run down or expensive – or both – and frequently overcrowde­d and sterile. In an era where student housing is a lucrative investment opportunit­y, ESHC concentrat­es on a positive resident experience rather than high returns.

However, ESHC is not just about cheap rents – it has built a strong community, with benefits spilling over into residents’ personal and social worlds. As Nathan Bower-bir, who lives in the co-op, explains: “Members who had never before used a hammer have built new kitchen shelves, replaced boiler thermostat­s, and wired new light fittings – developing valuable skills and boosting their own confidence.”

The student housing co-op is a place where everyone has to learn to communicat­e better with each other, to work things out. There is enormous demand to live there – yet it has struggled to grow by acquiring new property because of extremely high house prices in Edinburgh.

ESHC is the largest of only three student housing co-ops in the UK – and there are only 11 registered housing co-ops in Scotland out of 685 across the UK. Why is this, when the benefits are there to see? There are many reasons, including high property costs and a perception that housing co-ops are too challengin­g, too difficult to regulate.

With publicatio­n of this new report, which we launched at the cross-party group on co-ops at the Scottish Parliament, we are trying to tackle a lack of political understand­ing.

There was very positive support for housing co-ops at the meeting and the report contains several recommenda­tions to get the issue onto the political agenda in Scotland.

These include a three-year pilot programme to aid the developmen­t of more housing co-ops, consulting

Scotland’s social tenants to understand their appetite for increased involvemen­t in decisions regarding their homes and neighbourh­oods, and granting targeted relief from Land and Buildings Transactio­n Tax on additional property purchases made by fully mutual housing co-ops.

 ??  ?? 0 Members of Edinburgh Student Housing Co-op benefit from cheap rents and a
0 Members of Edinburgh Student Housing Co-op benefit from cheap rents and a
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