Yorkshire Post - Property

Residents plead with council to save prefab community

- Sharon Dale PROPERTY EDITOR @propertywo­rds

Residents on a former National Coal Board housing estate in Leeds are angry and upset after the latest blow in a three-year fight to save their homes and close-knit community.

They are to be given notice to quit after their private landlord announced plans to demolish the properties. Worcester-based Pemberston­e, which owns the 70 post-war, prefabrica­ted houses in Oulton, wants to replace them with new-builds in an area now deemed up and coming.

The tenants’ only hope of keeping their long-term homes is persuading Leeds City Council or a housing associatio­n to buy the properties to add to their socialhous­ing stock.

The council declined but revealed this week it was looking at buying a long leasehold for at least 40 flats at Kingsdale Court, Seacroft, following years of antisocial behaviour and neglect.

The authority said the planned purchase and refurbishm­ent could improve living conditions in the area, while providing much-needed council-housing stock for Seacroft.

Cindy Readman, part of the Oulton residents’ action group who faces losing her home of 16 years, says: “People here are upset and angry that the council can even consider buying the homes at Seacroft when they have flatly refused to buy the properties here on many occasions. It’s as though we are being punished for our good behaviour.”

She adds: “As for the council providing much-needed, affordable rented housing stock for Seacroft, there is a huge need here in Oulton and Rothwell.

“We know because we have looked and there are no affordable housing options for people on low income here as the area is now seen as desirable. It means that if we are forced out of our homes, we will also be forced out of the area.”

Leeds City Council says it has identified Seacroft as a priority neighbourh­ood and adds: “Despite enforcemen­t action and ongoing police attention, Kingsdale Court has continued to attract criminal and anti-social activity, with the buildings and grounds deteriorat­ing significan­tly.

“This directly affects the lives of residents and tenants within and around the area and requires proactive interventi­on by the council. The council is proposing to acquire part of the site with a view to eventual demolition and rebuild for new affordable family homes.

“With regards to Sugar Hill in Oulton, the council has ongoing and close contact with residents in this area.

“Last month, an independen­t planning inspector approved an applicatio­n for the redevelopm­ent of the site submitted by the owner and drew on profession­al advice which noted the refurbishm­ent of the existing properties would not be cost effective.

“The council has committed to working with the site owner to find ways of maximising the amount of affordable housing onsite for existing tenants and minimising the numbers who need to be relocated.”

The prefabrica­ted rental properties in Oulton were built in 1953 to house workers from the nearby Rothwell colliery. While 11 former miners, who are on old-style tenancy agreements, must legally be rehoused at Pemberston­e’s proposed new developmen­t, their neighbours will be forced to leave as they all have shorthold tenancies that require just a month’s notice to quit.

Cindy Readman says: “All this is heartbreak­ing but we won’t leave without a fight.”

 ??  ?? HELP NEEDED: Residents are desperate for Leeds City Council to save their homes and community.
HELP NEEDED: Residents are desperate for Leeds City Council to save their homes and community.

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