
Shared ownership: Fount Spring Place has come on to the market almost two years late. Are house-buyers wising up to the problems of ‘shared ownership’
Even before the latest global economic shock hit the construction trade, house-building in London had slowed to a crawl. JOHNNY DOBBYN looks at one scheme of more than 100 flats in Purley that provides a possible case study to show why government housing targets seem unachievable
Nearly two years later than anticipated, Southern Housing has released on to the housing market a huge scheme of flats in Purley called Fount Spring Place.
Southern Housing is among the country’s largest housing associations and registered social landlords, with 80,000 dwellings across London, the south-east and Midlands, which together house more than 167,000 people.
Fount Spring Place is Southern’s latest development, and forms part of the mega “Mosaic Place” scheme around Banstead Road that also includes sites such as Purley Baptist Church, Russell Hill Parade and on the Brighton Road.
Fount Spring Place is the “South Site”, as opposed to the Purley Tower’s “Island Site” across the road. It is part of a Purley planning saga that stretches back almost 10 years, to December 2016, and has involved a public inquiry and a call-in by the Secretary of State.
Fount Spring Place had planning permission for 106 flats, and construction started in early 2021, but it has been plagued by delays owing to a lack of proper safety documentation and a satisfactory Fire Risk Assessment. The delays have continued and the scheme’s launch announcement in February is now looking premature. Continue reading →
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