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Monday 11 April 2016

A solution to our housing problems: respacing >>> >>> >>> or "how empty buildings can be used by the community on a meanwhile basis"

Respacing is the latest idea on how to cope with lack of affordable housing:




Published on Jan 2, 2016

A short video showing some highlights from the first Respacing Conference, which considered the concept of holistic urban regeneration. The two day event was held at independent social space, The Hive in Dalston, a showcase project to demonstrate how empty buildings can be used by the community on a meanwhile basis.


Respacing Conference 2015 highlights - YouTube

With lots of projects happening everywhere:
respace projects – Hive
Community interest group hoping to turn Oast House squatters' dreams into a reality - Get Surrey

This evening on Radio 4 we heard Harriet Sergeant, columnist for the Daily Mail and a contributor to the right-leaning Centre for Policy Studies, looking into the ideas and the projects:

A Waste of Space

Harriet Sergeant investigates whether empty commercial buildings could house the homeless.

In October 2015, a group of housing activists - the Manchester Angels - broke into the defunct Manchester Stock Exchangeand started living there illegally. They expected to be evicted by the building's new owners, Premier League footballers Gary Neville and Ryan Giggs, who were midway through converting it into boutique hotel. But instead of action to get the squatters removed, the footballers decided to let them stay for the winter. Not everyone was happy with either party and the police were frequently called to incidents at the Stock Exchange, caused by rival groups of squatters.

Politicians have been so concerned about the damage caused to commercial property that they want to make squatting in commercial buildings a criminal, rather than a civil offence. But with the number of empty commercial buildings reaching record numbers - estimated at more than 1.5 million in the UK - has this high profile philanthropic gesture by two of the world's most famous footballers challenged prevailing attitudes to squatting?

Harriet Sergeant, columnist for the Daily Mail and a contributor to the right-leaning Centre for Policy Studies, investigates why co-operatives and collectives are choosing to occupy defunct commercial spaces and whether the use of empty commercial buildings could provide a short-term fix for the burgeoning housing crisis.

Harriet talks to property developers, local authorities, leading academics, landlords, social groups and cooperatives using the example of the Manchester Stock Exchange to understand commercial squatting. Can it be harnessed to benefit cities, rather than seen chiefly as an anti social act?

Presenter: Harriet Sergeant


BBC Radio 4 - A Waste of Space
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