Self Help in Action – Phoenix Housing Co-operative

September 1, 2009 by  
Filed under Latest News

Ray hard at work

Ray hard at work

For an anticipated cost of just £6,250 per property, Phoenix Housing Co-operative, based in London’s East End, has brought back into use four long term empty properties at social rent levels under a Service Level Agreement likely to last for 5 years.

The properties, long empty due to chronic rising damp resulting from a fractured Damp Proofing Course (DPC) had been declared ‘long term management voids’ because their owners, Poplar Harca Housing Association, judged the expenditure needed to bring them back into use ‘uneconomic’ given that the block has a limited future lifespan.

Beginning work in May 2009, Tower Hamlets-based Phoenix worked with volunteers to bring the ground floor flats back into use for a fraction of the £30,000 per flat previously quoted to the housing association, whilst also providing organised work experience and practical skills guidance for the volunteers.

Co-op Manager, Alison Masterman, explains: “The Phoenix Housing Refurbishment initiative is really very simple and we think very elegant: take a housing co-op populated by people who have experienced homelessness, who are committed to self-help and to creating homes for the next generation of those in need; and combine that with a bit of technical ‘know how’ to bring empty properties back into use at a fraction of the market cost. We can see no reason not to run with this idea, to seek more funding, more support, more partners and in doing so expand opportunities – that is the opportunity for a stable home and the skills from which to thrive.”

Three volunteers have already secured employment: one as a general handyman in a large hotel, another as a self-employed plasterer and another as a bathroom renovation contractor.

Two volunteers describe their experience of working on the projects: “I have become empowered. Learning skills like rendering and plastering has added to my skillset”, says Ray Clarke (pictured). John Walker agrees: “It’s hard to express all the rewards you get from working on this project!! Volunteers who have
given their time usually spend much more than they originally volunteer, which goes to show the
tangible benefits members get educationally, socially and, dare I say it, spiritually.”

Phoenix Project

Phoenix Project

When Phoenix began work on the properties on the ground floor of a 1929 brick built mansion block in London E3 they were without kitchens, bathrooms, and heating. Using recycled, donated and non-toxic green materials a new injection DPC system has been completed including re-plastering and decoration. Kitchens, bathrooms and heating have been reinstated. All of the work was fully registered with the Health and Safety Executive and supervised by a qualified Site Manager.

Phoenix Community Housing Co-op was established in 1980 in the East End of London to provide short life accommodation in shared supportive communities to single people on low incomes who were in housing need. It now operates mainly through taking on short-life properties from large housing associations such as the Peabody Trust and Poplar Harca in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, although overtime it has also acquired 17 properties that it now owns. It currently manages 155 short life units, a combination of shared street properties and self-contained estate flats.

Phoenix is currently seeking funding and more properties. It aims to expand on the concept of bringing empty and dilapidated properties back into use through self-help development in exchange for medium/long term (5 – 30 years) housing leases. This may take the form of larger more ambitious schemes, with bids for Temporary Social Housing Grants in partnership with a local housing association and/or developing the building skills and work experience element into more formal opportunities for working with vulnerable people needing housing.

For more information about Phoenix Housing Co-op email Alison Masterman at mail@phoenixhousing.co.uk or visit www.phoenixhousing.co.uk

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Empty flats let for six months to people in need

August 15, 2009 by  
Filed under Other News

For the next six months, people in housing need in Brent are being let flats due to be demolished in a joint scheme between Brent Council, Brent Housing Partnership and Brent Community Housing.

Tenants on the Barham Estate have already begun to move out to make way for a £80 million redevelopment. Instead of leaving the empty flat disused before the redevelopment begins, they are being made available for people in short term housing need.

Brent Community Housing works with voluntary organisations that need places for their homeless clients to stay at short notice, often single working people, who cannot afford to rent privately but are willing to stay or move somewhere for a short period of time while they make alternative housing arrangements.

Five flats are occupied already with the sixth person expected to move in to their new short term home soon.

Martin Cheeseman, Director of Housing and Community Care at Brent Council said: “This agreement works really well for everyone – especially the residents of the Barham Park Estate. Rather then leaving flats on the estate vacant, which are expensive to protect and attract anti social behaviour such as graffiti and vandalism as well as squatters, we have arranged for members of Brent Community Housing to move their clients into some of the flats on a short term basis which will provide them with some much needed housing and give both the tenant and BCH sometime to address their housing issue.”

For more details see:

www.bhphousing.co.uk
www.brent.gov.uk
www.bch.coop

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