Last year the Building Society Association (BSA) came out firmly in supporting offsite construction as a positive way of providing well-designed, quality, affordable homes quickly. The recent Housing White Paper also brought into focus questions surrounding mortgageability and long-term value for banks and lenders for offsite manufactured homes.
The amount of newbuild housing required to ease the UK’s residential crisis are well documented. But if the annual target of 250,000 homes a year is to be met, there needs to be a shift in the way that lenders make money available so that it can actually happen.
The financial sector has become a more risk averse world in recent years and lenders always operate in a climate where unknown quantities are not overly welcome. At the moment offsite manufacture is one of those – still regarded as a mysterious construction sideline when approached for funding. We live in a world in motion where the technological advances of offsite manufacture have given rise to new materials, new techniques that reduce this element of uncertainty and risk.
As the BSA says in its report ‘Laying the foundations for MMC: Expanding the role of Modern Methods of Construction, one potential solution to the UK housing crisis’: “One of the challenges is that as some of these construction methods are so new, there can be little or no historical data demonstrating how they will weather and the likely lifespan they will have. This is clearly a challenge when mortgage terms are 25 years plus and getting longer.”
As reported in trade paper Mortgage Introducer, Simon Read, Managing Director of Magellan Homeloans, was quoted saying: “The challenge is whether they’re going to be standing in 25 years and until you’ve gone through 25 years you just don’t know. Workmanship is an issue because it’s all well and good saying it’s created in a workshop and fitted onsite but if the person onsite doesn’t put the right amount of screws in, or insulate or put the cladding on right you end up with a house that rots on the inside and you don’t know it’s happened until it falls down.”
Matthew Wyles, Executive Director of Castle Trust, also added “I think I’d rather spend 12 months building something that’s going be able to stand for 100 years rather than something that after 10 years will be uninhabitable. I’d like to challenge how many of these good people who come up with these prefabricated schemes want to live in these properties themselves or want their children to live in them. Offsite construction is about speed, and quality and durability should come ahead of speed.”
So that is the other side of the coin. Comments based on an entrenched view of ‘traditional’ brick and block construction, or little in-depth understanding of what offsite construction offers? The point is that many lenders hold similar views surrounding quality and longevity. However, advances in factory technology, precision engineering, digital CNC/CAD systems with building information modelling (BIM), improvements in material specification and quality management, means that offsite construction now offers as the BSA aptly point out: “almost unimaginable improvements in performance compared with earlier generations.” The quality differences of a 21st century offsite manufactured building to those rickety prefabs of the 1940s is off the scale.
The housebuilding and construction sectors are striving to modernise and change the ways they do business. It doesn’t take that long to get used to doing things differently. Often those different things are better. If the neverending saga of the UK’s housing crisis is ever to ease, the UK’s banks, building societies, surveyors and valuers need to collectively do something similar.
For more information visit: www.bsa.org.uk
Source: Offsite Magazine - Issue 5