Six shortlisted applicants will win £40,000 to develop their plans

The government is looking for designers to create the homes of the future and has launched a competition to find them. 

Housebuilding

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Housing minister Christopher Pincher has appealed for small businesses, designers and manufacturers to come up with ideas for homes that can be tailored to suit the UK’s growing elderly population. The contest will also seek to explore how low-carbon homes can be developed.

Pincher replaced Esther McVey, who was sacked as housing minister last month after less than seven months in the job.

Entries for the competition will be judged by a panel of experts, with six applicants shortlisted, each receiving £40,000 to develop their plans.

Three winning entries will then be selected and introduced to Homes England, the government’s housing delivery agency, to look at how they can develop bids to build homes on its land.

Details of how to enter the competition can be found at the Home of 2030 website. Initial applications are open until 15 April 2020.

The competition comes hot on the heels of the government’s consultation on its Future Homes Standard, which requires homes built from 2025 to have 80% fewer carbon emissions.

Critics of the proposed changes, including RIBA, said they were not ambitious enough to meet the challenges facing the environment, while the mayor of London Sadiq Khan accused the government of delaying urgent action to tackle the climate emergency.

RIBA said the proposed removal of the fabric energy efficiency standard under the government’s plans would hide the use of poor building materials and risked homes being built with less insulation now and in the future than was currently required under Part L 2013.

Competition applicants will submit an outline design for homes that are:

  • Age-friendly and inclusive – appealing to a variety of age groups and adaptable to how needs will change as people become older
  • Low environmental impact – applying technology and construction techniques to deliver net zero carbon emissions
  • Healthy living – promoting better health and wellbeing, such as through access to green spaces and communal areas
  • Deliverable & scalable – homes that can be rolled-out across the country

Source: MHCLG