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With 80% of social homes still rented standards of accommodation for tenants, social housing providers are having to place increasing focus on the provision areas. With cost-effective adds comfort. Along with a low purchase price, reducing the cost of installation glue-free installation on top of existing properties as well as refurbish at voids.
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has been helping with a study at the House 2.0 is built by Bellway inside a climate- controlled chamber at the university. Panasonic is one of the manufacturers Jamie Bursnell, Head of Technical and Innovations at Bellway shared that the source heat pumps can cost as little as £1.84 on a typical winter day to heat a
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heat pumps have been installed into 33, two, three and four-bedroom new build homes as innovative zero carbon ready homes. Gedling Green,
has been developed on an old coal mining colliery site by Keepmoat Homes. Commenting on Keepmoat Homes’ experience of working with Panasonic, Trudie when compared to a gas boiler. We have already planned to install a large number of Panasonic heat pump units in some of our other sites across the UK.
Nottingham City Council has let the 1,000th new home built under the council housing element of its Building a Better Nottingham programme. Building a Better Nottingham was
launched in 2013 by Nottingham City Council in partnership with Nottingham City Homes, then the council’s arm’s length management organisation (ALMO) for housing. The programme aimed to replace outdated social housing across housing for Nottingham people who needed a home and were on the housing register (the waiting list). Since 2013, new council homes have been built under the programme in 17 of the city’s 20 electoral wards. 2015 and 2016 saw completion of new council
homes in areas such as Broxtowe, Bestwood, Clifton, Top Valley, Aspley and Sneinton. Awards followed, including from the Considerate Constructors scheme and the UK Housing Awards.
regeneration scheme in a generation followed, changing the city’s skyline forever. Five tower blocks were demolished in Lenton, and were replaced with 142 new affordable homes including the award-winning Palmer Court independent living community. Smaller sites continued to progress, including six bungalows and 33 houses at the site of the former Morley School in St Ann’s, 37 one-bed apartments for older people in Strelley, and eight family homes in Sneinton.
developments, this time in Bestwood. The Beckhampton site comprises 129 two- and three-bedroom houses, built on the site of the former homes, all of which are now let. Cllr Jay Hayes, Portfolio Holder for
for social housing in Nottingham. The city has always been proud of its of every household in the city lived in a council home. We’re bringing more new developments forward all the time, and I look forward to seeing these new and growing in years to come.”
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