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Economic Development

Keepmoat eyes 800 new homes across East Yorkshire as it contends with industry challenges

The developer says it has seen a shift in interest back to sites within commutable distance of offices following Covid-induced demand for more rural locations

Keepmoat says it has recruited on its East Yorkshire patch in preparation for driving housing delivery numbers from about 630 to 800 per year.(Image: Keepmoat)

The housebuilding market in East Yorkshire is in a "good place" but faces a number of key challenges in planning delays, materials price inflation and affordability, a senior leader at Keepmoat has said.

Ben Hindley, the firm's land and partnerships director in East Yorkshire, said Keepmoat is seeing sustained sales interest across the region and buyers beginning to look again at "traditional heartlands" of urban areas having coveted rural locations during, and in the wake of the pandemic.

Mr Hindley said that following changing working arrangements, the developer has seen more interest in sites within commutable distances of offices and workplaces.

Keepmoat is targeting the delivery of about 800 new homes per year across the patch serviced by its Doncaster office, up from current levels of about 630.

The firm - which has seen renewed interest for its two-bedroom properties since the end of the Help to Buy scheme in 2023 - hopes to be operating from 18 live sites by Spring next year with 15 people recruited over the past six months to bolster its teams across building, surveying, architecture and engineering.

Speaking to BusinessLive, Mr Hindley said: "We never had that cliff edge drop which we thought we might have had when interest rates went up.

"Don't get me wrong, demand did go down and it's certainly nowhere near what it was post-Covid. I think we're all probably quite thankful for that as it was just an artificial boom and it just wasn't sustainable. Pricing was too high and the number of new homes being sought was just too high for what the national capability is.

"We've just turned back to what is a more normal set of market conditions. Interest is strong from people and interest rates coming down is obviously helping them with affordability as well. You're able to get mortgage rates at less than 4% which is far more affordable then the 6-7% people were getting previously.