Sadiq Khan says there will be ‘significant impact’ on affordable home building without government cash

伦敦市长警告说,建筑材料和劳动力成本的上升“严重影响”了伦敦经济适用房的供应,计划的建设价格上涨了45%。

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan at October 2019's Mayor's Question Time

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan at October 2019’s Mayor’s Question Time

Sadiq Khan (pictured) said the “double impact” of Brexit and the pandemic was slowing housebuilding progress, with the cost of materials for housing rising by more than a fifth on average in the capital.

He said the rises were likely to have a “significant impact” on the delivery of affordable housing, with certain schemes “severely impacted”, and called for additional government funding to meet the challenge.

A statement from the mayor’s office said that one development site in south east London had seen tender prices spike by 45%, while another London borough said total build cost inflation had hit 17%.

Architects have reportedsimilar stories of sudden cost hikes.

The GLA has previously called on the government to provide funding of around £5bn each year to subsidise the construction of affordable homes in the capital, compared to the figure of around £1bn currently offered.

Khan also repeated his called that the government issue a one-off “coronavirus recovery visa” to allow foreign construction workers into the capital, given current labour shortages

Khan said: “The twin effects of the pandemic and Brexit has hit both housebuilders and consumers hard.

“I am calling on ministers to provide the increased funding for genuinely affordable housing in London which is needed now more than ever.”

他补充说,如果没有建筑和水泥方面的帮助,没有足够的熟练工人,提供经济适用房的工作就有停滞的风险。”

Geeta Nanda, the chair of G15 group of London-based housing associations, and chief executive of MTVH, said rising costs of materials was “a real challenge”.

Khan’s call came as the Federation of Master Builders issued a new State of Trade Survey which found 95% of builders were seeing a rise in material costs, with 74% having put up their prices for work and 91% expecting material costs to increase in the first part of 2022.