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Homebuilders say Crossrail 2 is vital to fixing housing crisis

Created on
03 April 2017
  • More than 60 homebuilding and property industry leaders highlight the importance of Crossrail 2
  • Crossrail 2 will help deliver 200,000 homes in London and across the South East, from Hampshire to Cambridgeshire
  • Housebuilders tell Chancellor they are ready to seize the opportunity and boost efforts to tackle the housing crisis

Leading figures from homebuilding, property industries and housing associations have today (April 3) urged the Government to give its firm backing to Crossrail 2 and provide a key boost in tackling London’s housing crisis.

Building on the economic case outlined by senior business figures last week, 66 homebuilding and property industry leaders, including Taylor Wimpey, British Land and all of the g15, London’s largest housing associations, have written to the Chancellor, Transport Secretary and Communities Secretary to show how vital Crossrail 2 is to unlock new, good-quality homes and commercial space.

The industry leaders say the new railway would transform transport capacity and connectivity for underdeveloped areas of the capital, such as the Upper Lea Valley. This will give housebuilders the certainty they need to accelerate the development of up to 200,000 new homes urgently needed to help address the housing shortage across London and the South East.

The benefits will be felt right across the South East with 30 per cent of the new homes delivered outside London, supporting regional growth corridors between Cambridge and Stansted, and south west towards Portsmouth.

The signatories urge the Government to give the green light to the scheme without delay, so they can seize the opportunities to develop housing and commercial space in areas opened up by improved transport capacity.

For example, Angel Road station in the Upper Lea Valley is currently London’s least-used station, and offers no services at all into Liverpool St between 10am and 3.30pm. Crossrail 2 would give the area up to 12 trains per hour, transforming its viability for development.

The letter comes on the same day that the Westminster Property Association (WPA) called on the Government to back Crossrail 2 with the publication of a report setting out how private sector investment could be maximised to help recoup the project’s costs.

Tony Pidgley CBE, Chairman, Berkeley Group, said: “Crossrail 2 is a fantastic opportunity to improve London and the South East’s infrastructure, and will help us build the homes this region desperately needs. It will unlock areas of huge potential, such as the Upper Lea Valley, and we will look to these areas to meet the demand for housing. Crossrail 2 is the only scheme that can make a significant difference to the South East’s housing stock and the Government must not delay.”

Stephen Howlett, Peabody Chief Executive, said: “The right transport infrastructure is essential if we are to boost the supply of desperately needed new homes in the capital. Crossrail 1 and the extension of the Docklands Light Railway will unlock 20,000 new homes at Thamesmead in South-East London and Crossrail 2 would have a similarly transformative effect across London. As well as boosting housing supply, Crossrail 2 will create jobs and drive London’s economy. We hope the project will get the go ahead in the very near future. “

Craig McWilliam, Chief Executive of Grosvenor Britain & Ireland, said: “Grosvenor is in the heart of the West End, transforming its London estate. The West End needs to work harder for its communities and all Londoners with new investment. The case for Crossrail 2 is strong, the benefits are national and the opportunity should be taken. With it, private-sector investment would follow, delivering new homes, new jobs and the best public spaces.”

Melanie Leech, Chief Executive of the British Property Federation, said: “Crossrail 2 will stimulate regeneration up and down its route from the Solent to the Wash, opening sites for new housing and employment. A swift decision from Government on Crossrail 2 would provide a vote of confidence for our industry as we support most, if not all, UK economic activity, through our provision of homes, offices and commercial space.”

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “It’s no secret that London and the South East need new homes, and the government can clearly show its long-term commitment to tackling the housing crisis by backing Crossrail 2. Key homebuilding and property leaders are clear that this vital project will unlock areas across the region and bring up to 200,000 new homes where they are desperately needed. It’s time for the government to take note of the huge transport, economic and housing benefits, and give us the go ahead to progress.”

Last month, more than 70 business leaders, including at EY, Deloitte, Aviva Group, Gatwick Airport, Heathrow Airport, Canary Wharf Group, FSB Surrey & West Sussex, and Surrey, Essex, Hertfordshire, Hampshire, and Cambridgeshire Chambers of Commerce, hailed the infrastructure project as being of national importance. It will support 200,000 jobs, and generate 60,000 supply chain jobs across the UK, including 18,000 apprentices, boosting the national economy by economy by up to £150bn.

Crossrail 2 would transform journey times and connectivity from the Solent to the Wash. It would relieve congestion on the overcrowded key National Rail lines from Hampshire to Cambridgeshire, and link with HS2 at Euston. It would also relieve pressure on the Underground as the population of London and the South East grows. Without the additional capacity Crossrail 2 will provide, mainline stations will face ever-greater overcrowding and delays.

London has already committed to meeting half the cost – unlike other nationally significant projects that do not receive such levels of local funding. But now the project needs a commitment from ministers.

Notes to editors

  • TfL has submitted an updated business case and funding plan to the Transport Secretary‎, who is due to make a decision in the spring on further Government support. Construction could start in the early 2020s and the railway could be operational by 2033

 

  • Copy of the letter:

 

Dear Chancellor,

 

We want to see a government commitment to progress Crossrail 2 without delay. The project is vital for us to unlock capacity for new, good-quality homes, offices and other commercial uses that are urgently needed across London and the South East.

 

We see Crossrail 2, half of which will be directly funded by London, as a key boost to our collective efforts to tackle the housing crisis. It will transform transport capacity and connectivity for underdeveloped areas of the capital, such as the Upper Lea Valley, giving the certainty needed to accelerate the development of up to 200,000 new homes. Many of these new homes will be in the capital, with 30 per cent outside London supporting regional employment centres like Cambridge and Portsmouth.

 

With a green light for the project to move to the next phase, we will seize the opportunities Crossrail 2 presents through greater transport capacity, new connections and improved links from Hampshire to Cambridgeshire and beyond. We urge the Government to give the scheme its firm backing now so that Crossrail 2 can move ahead with certainty.

 

Yours sincerely,

 

Name

Job title

Organisation

Property companies

David Partridge

Chief Executive

Argent LLP

Gary Ennis 

Regional Managing Director, London and Southern Region

Barratt London 

Tony Pidgley CBE

Chairman

Berkeley Group

Chris Grigg 

Chief Executive

British Land

Martin Jepson

President and Chief Operating Officer

Brookfields

Ian Hawksworth

Chief Executive

Capital and Counties

Fredrik Widlund

Chief Executive 

CLS Holdings

John Burns

Chief Executive

Derwent

Jo Allen

Chief Executive

Frogmore 

Helen Gordon

Chief Executive

Grainger Plc

Toby Courtauld

Chief Executive

Great Portland Estates Plc

Craig McWilliam

Chief Executive

Grosvenor Britain & Ireland

David Atkins 

Chief Executive 

Hammerson

Matthew Bonning-Snook

Development Director

Helical Plc

Robert Noel

Chief Executive

Land Securities Group Plc

Sir Stuart Lipton

Partner

Lipton Rogers Developments LLP

Killian Hurley  

Chief Executive

Mount Anvil

Paul Brundage

Executive Vice President, Senior Managing Director, Europe

Oxford Properties Group

Angus Dodd

Chief Executive

Quintain

Keith Parrett

Regional Chief Executive

Redrow Homes

David Sleath

Chief Executive

SEGRO

Brian Bicknell

Chief Executive

Shaftesbury Plc

David Camp

Chief Executive

Stanhope Plc

Ingrid Osborne

Managing Director

Taylor Wimpey

 

 

 

Estates

Simon Elmer

Steward

Bedford Estates

Hugh Seaborn

Chief Executive 

Cadogan Estate

Andrew Hynard

Chief Executive

Howard de Walden Estate

Richard Everett

Estate Manager

Sloane Stanley Estate

Bill Moore CBE

Chief Executive 

Portman Estate

 

 

 

Housing Associations

Darrell Mercer

Group Chief Executive

A2Dominion Group

Paul Hackett

Chief Executive

AmicusHorizon 

Rod Cahill

Group Chief Executive

Catalyst Housing

Keith Exford

Chief Executive

Clarion Housing Group

Yvonne Arrowsmith

Chief Executive

East Thames

Brendan Sarsfield

Chief Executive

Family Mosaic

Neil Hadden

Chief Executive

Genesis Housing Association

David Montague

Chief Executive

L&Q

Brian Johnson

Chief Executive

Metropolitan

Helen Evans

Chief Executive

Network Homes

Kate Davies

Chief Executive

Notting Hill Housing Group

Stephen Howlett

Chief Executive

Peabody

Tom Dacey

Group Chief Executive

Southern Housing Group

Elaine Bailey

Chief Executive 

The Hyde Group

 

 

 

Representative bodies

Richard Kauntze

Chief Executive 

BCO

Melanie Leech

Chief Executive

British Property Federation

Anthony Impey

Chair

Fifty Thousand Homes 

Jasmine Whitbread

Chief Executive

London First

Charles Begley

Executive Director

WPA

Colin Stanbridge

Chief Executive

London Chamber of Commerce and Industry

 

 

 

Property services

Michael Clark

Executive Director

Aedas

Stephen Hubbard

Chairman - UK

CBRE

David Dryden

Chairman, Partner

Cundall

Digby Flower

Chairman, UK & Head of London Markets

Cushman & Wakefield LLP

Alistair Subba Row 

Senior Partner

Farebrother

Sir Terry Farrell

Principal

Farrells

Gordon Ingram 

Senior Partner

GIA

Ros Goode

Regional Senior Director

GVA

Greg Hill

Deputy Managing Director

Hill 

Ian Anderson

Executive Director

Iceni Projects Ltd

Chris Ireland

UK Chief Executive

JLL

Mark Reynolds

Chief Executive

Mace

Ken Shuttleworth

Founder

Make Architects

John Rhodes

Director

Quod

Bruce Ritchie

Chief Executive

Residential Land

Michael Lowndes

Senior Director

Turley

Asa Plant

Associate Director

Vectos

 

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