TheJasperCo
Well-known member
I'm not a NIMBY, but the day our government feels the need to tear up farmland and areas of outstanding natural beauty, is the day I will concede that we are - as a country - officially overpopulated.
what are you on about - you cant have it all your own way. you want to concrete over our countryside just so you can afford to buy a house?
keep renting - and go for a walk in the countryside every so often instead -youll feel better
if that doesnt work - move somewhere where you can afford to live - rather than moan about it here
Soulman--If I believed that my vote would change a thing I would use it.
My kids are 14/21/24/29 and they will all have to move away from Brighton to get a chance on the property ladder---one has already to Tarring.
Until councils prioritise housing for the people that have got off their backsides and worked for a living we are all fecked.
I like a green field as much as the next bloke but if all my kids were able to afford their own places that is more important to me.
If its on a brownfield site then great - but they tend to be £250.000 places.
what are you on about - you cant have it all your own way. you want to concrete over our countryside just so you can afford to buy a house?
keep renting - and go for a walk in the countryside every so often instead -youll feel better
if that doesnt work - move somewhere where you can afford to live - rather than moan about it here
Best solution is to invigorate the North a bit and give incentives for business to move North. Plenty of housing up there, and areas for redevelopment, just not enough jobs. Encourage or force certain business sector's to be based in the North, no reason for it all to be in London.
what are you on about - you cant have it all your own way. you want to concrete over our countryside just so you can afford to buy a house?
keep renting - and go for a walk in the countryside every so often instead -youll feel better
if that doesnt work - move somewhere where you can afford to live - rather than moan about it here
Lol Christ what a total tosser you are!
With respect Willy, the rents are extortionate. Many do not want to leave where they were born and brought up, leaving their friends etc.
By the way, i did move away....up North, so i have done it.
So many problems would be solved if this was done - more houses, more schools, more hospitals and of course a heck of a lot more JOBS! There'll still be PLENTY of countryside to enjoy, times have changed, I'd rather live in a affordable house then stare at an empty field!
No, the irony is you posting from Switzerland - a country that has managed to bypass world wars but has managed to do rather well
Well done you,upping your meagre posts on this thread.
So many problems would be solved if this was done - more houses, more schools, more hospitals and of course a heck of a lot more JOBS! There'll still be PLENTY of countryside to enjoy, times have changed, I'd rather live in a affordable house then stare at an empty field!
i think wrong direction is what we are looking at. £500 a mnth will not get you much of a mortgage and even then interest only. once they have built on the greenbelt you may still not be able to afford to buy. You will soon know. Mayfields have plans to build 10,000 homes between Henfield and Hurstpierpoint with Twineham being the centre.
Search mayfieldtowns.
How about we don't?
The water and sewerage supplied are already over stretched in the South. It would cost millions/billions to provide a network that could bring water in from around the country and would also cause a lot of moaning about the roadworks to get it done.
Surely we could invest more in other areas and attract business to then to ensure they become as financially stable meaning people don't flock to an overcrowded area?
...Building on greenfield sites WOULD NOT bring house prices down to that level ever.
So for that reason, it's a no from me for building on our green and pleasant areas. Other solutions need to be found.
you cannot say that outright. for a start, what type of house? i wouldnt expect 4 bed semis in the south east to go as low as that, but what about 2 bed semi? or a flat? its not alot cheaper than currently possible if you go away from some popular areas. the irony here would be that the sort of people who want small homes dont particularly want to be on green field, they want to be close to town centres. the problem is there is little profit in developers making smal homes on brown field. they want to make 4 bed semis on the edge of town or develop fancy tower blocks in town (snapped by the rental market) because thats the money is made. why dont we have a policy where we grant planning on green belt with a compliementry scheme on brown field? much more likly to address the range of housing needs than the current policy of taxing house builders up front.
and its not about lowering prices necessarily, just arresting the rise would help home become affordable in a few years time. we have created artificial scarcity of land in this country, with house prices to match. planning permission in Sussex raises value of an acre of land 100x from agricultrual rates. thats going to raise the prices of homes. we need to accept some development on green belt, or accept people struggling to pay rents or mortgages. claiming to protect a few fields (often not particularly green or pleasant) is really about protecting exsiting property owners value.