94 new homes and jobs on the way as work starts on bulldozing Coventry's outdated Wood End estate - The Coventry Observer

94 new homes and jobs on the way as work starts on bulldozing Coventry's outdated Wood End estate

Coventry Editorial 31st Dec, 2021 Updated: 6th Jan, 2022   0

WORK has started on demolishing an outdated housing estate in north Coventry where 94 high quality new homes will be built as part of a housing scheme.

The West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) has invested £1million in the project off Milverton Road on the Wood End estate.

Developer Keepmoat Homes will deliver the new properties on the 5.5acre site. Of the 94 homes, 20 will be available for social rent in partnership with Citizen Housing

The scheme will generate dozens of employment opportunities, including apprenticeships and work placements, which will be delivered throughout the lifetime of the project.




Wood End was built by the city council in the late 1950s and early 1960s to rehouse families from the inner city as well as people moving to Coventry to work in its then-booming car industry.

But the area’s fortunes declined and it became one of the city’s most deprived neighbourhoods. It has now been earmarked for major redevelopment together with the nearby Manor Farm, Henley Green and Deedmore neighbourhoods – a project that will eventually see more than 3,300 new homes built.


The Wood End scheme, part of the wider Spirit Quarters redevelopment, is the latest in a number of investments the WMCA has made throughout the pandemic to regenerate brownfield sites for new homes and jobs, helping to relieve development pressure on the green belt.

Andy Street, Mayor of the West Midlands and chair of the WMCA, said: “Creating new communities and sustainable neighbourhoods on brownfield land has been one of the region’s real success stories in recent years.

“By using government cash to clean-up derelict industrial land or residential sites like Wood End we’ve helped create thousands of new homes and jobs, whilst also protecting our precious and irreplaceable green belt.

“Our investments have also helped to create and secure local jobs for local people by guaranteeing work for the construction sector during the pandemic.

“The existing housing at Wood End had come to the end of its life and was no longer fit for purpose but this WMCA investment means it can now be demolished and replaced with good quality, energy efficient and affordable homes for local people.”

As with all schemes which receive WMCA investment, at least 20 per cent of the homes will be classed as affordable under the combined authority’s own regional definition of affordability, which is linked to real world local wages rather than property prices.

Charlotte Goode, Keepmoat Homes’ regional managing director, said: “We’re thrilled to be working with the WMCA to help rejuvenate Wood End, and provide much needed new homes for residents.

“This site isn’t your typical new homes development, it is part of a wider regeneration project which represents a tremendous opportunity for the city’s growth.”

Keepmoat has already delivered almost 1,000 homes on previous phases at Wood End with Citizen Housing and the developer said, as well as the properties, it would also breathe new life into the area.

Coun Mike Bird, WMCA portfolio holder for housing and land, added: “Without the WMCA’s intervention this new housing scheme would not have happened and the opportunity to build badly needed new homes would have been lost.

“That’s important because the West Midlands has an ambitious target to build 215,000 new homes by 2031 – homes that are energy efficient and affordable.

“By unlocking brownfield sites like Wood End for redevelopment we are also relieving pressure on our green belt and helping the region build its way towards a successful post-Covid-19 recovery that is greener and more socially inclusive.”

The Wood End investment has been made through the WMCA’s innovative Single Commissioning Framework which was launched in September 2019 to provide a single set of criteria which is applied to all housing projects in the region, including requirements on affordable housing, design and modular construction.

Click here for more on the homes.

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