Government urged to refurbish ‘outdated’ sheltered housing for older Brits
A panel of parliamentarians and experts has called for urgent action to regenerate a significant proportion of the estimated 527,000 sheltered housing properties in the UK to provide good-quality, accessible homes for people in later life that meet contemporary standards.
An inquiry initiated by the All-Party Parliament Group (APPG) on Housing and Care for Older People into ‘The Regeneration of Outdated Sheltered Housing’ has found that the scale of re-investment required across sheltered housing is significant.
Produced by the Housing Learning and Improvement Network (LIN) and sponsored by Abbeyfield, the report provides examples of providers that have successfully regenerated existing sheltered properties. It also recognises the financial pressures faced by many providers of sheltered housing which make it challenging to invest in updating existing stock.
Chaired by Lord Best, the report is aimed at policymakers, governmental agencies and sheltered housing providers involved in housing development.
It highlights the need to upgrade and regenerate outdated sheltered housing for older people. The report appeals to the government, Homes England and the Greater London Authority.
Key recommendations from the report include:
• A significant proportion of sheltered housing should be refurbished; attractive and contemporary sheltered housing can continue to enable down-sizing that allows families to obtain much-needed homes – including vacated general-needs social rented properties.
• A 10% target for older people’s housing should be part of a flexible approach by Homes England and the Greater London Authority for future capital investment, including the 2026-2031 Affordable Homes Programme and other funding streams, of which at least a third should be for replacing, updating and refurbishing existing forms of sheltered housing.
• Recycling of ‘historic’ grant funding, previously awarded to registered providers by Homes England and the GLA, should be permitted for refurbishing existing sheltered housing schemes (as well as for developing new schemes for older people).
• Homes England and GLA capital grant funding rules should ensure that housing providers can apply for and use capital grant to refurbish and upgrade existing sheltered housing schemes without ‘additionality’ requirements.
• MHCLG should work with the Treasury and DHSC to identify and secure revenue funding that can be used by local authorities and/or providers of sheltered housing to meet the revenue costs of providing support to residents of sheltered housing.
• Local authorities should undertake periodic Older Persons’ Housing Needs Assessments to determine local need and demand for all types of housing for older people, including sheltered housing, in addition to housing for older people that falls within the definition of supported housing in the Supported Housing (Regulatory Oversight) Act.
• Despite financial pressures, local authorities with social care responsibilities should make available revenue support to residents of sheltered housing.
• All social and private landlords with sheltered housing stock should conduct a strategic review of their portfolio’s current and future suitability, identifying options for:
o a) refurbishment/upgrades
o b) repurposing for other people/uses
o c) replacement development
• Disposals/sales should be avoided where possible. Both the Regulator of Social Housing, as part of its new standards regime, and all social housing providers should adopt a ‘charter for disposal of supported accommodation for older people’.
Chair of APPG on Housing and Care for Older People, Lord Best, said: “Sadly, a lot of the sheltered housing of the 1960s and 1970s is now past its sell-by date and ready for a serious upgrade. Bed-sits – let alone shared bathrooms – are no longer acceptable. If this accommodation becomes hard-to-let or is sold off, the nation will lose a precious asset that will be hugely expensive to replace.
“So now is the time for a significant programme of imaginative regeneration of outdated sheltered housing that can provide much-needed affordable, accessible, sociable homes fit for our ageing population for decades to come.”
Jeremy Porteus, CEO of the Housing Learning and Improvement Network (LIN) said: “We are immensely proud of the Housing LIN’s role as Secretariat to this important APPG Inquiry. It has shown that sheltered housing still provides a safe and secure home for tens of thousands of older households in the UK.
“From council and housing association stock to almshouse charities and Abbeyfields, it is also the single largest designated accommodation type available for older people.
“However, we have discovered that the sector is encountering significant operational challenges in maintaining this valuable asset. Much of the housing stock is in need of improvement, and there are increasing cost pressures on services.
“But with technology advances, modern construction materials and methods, as well as older people’s housing preferences changing too, we believe the timing is right to generate a contemporary sheltered housing offer that takes the ‘sheltered’ out of ‘sheltered housing’ and provides an attractive housing choice in later life for future generations instead.”
Paul Tennant, chief executive of Abbeyfield Living Society, which sponsored the inquiry, said: “At Abbeyfield, we understand the importance of high-quality housing to the lives of older people, and the role for providers such as ourselves to help ensure that an increasingly ageing population is catered for. We also have experience first-hand of the challenges facing those owning and operating homes that require significant investment to meet future needs and standards.
“This report highlights the vital contribution that existing sheltered housing is making in communities for older people. It also underlines that for many providers, particularly smaller ones facing multiple financial pressures, these assets are under threat.
“There is an urgent need for a clear plan for the future which includes access to funding and investment opportunities geared towards the refurbishment, upgrading and maintenance of existing housing stock as a viable alternative to simply building new developments.
“The recommendations set out clear and effective ways in which the government and providers can address these challenges and protect this precious asset for future generations.”