Show home unveiled at Derwenthorpe development

Nigel Ingram, director of development at the Joseph Rowntree Housing Trust Nigel Ingram, director of development at the Joseph Rowntree Housing Trust

IT HAS been a vision for decades, but dreams were finally turned to reality for Joseph Rowntree Housing Trust (JRHT) over the Easter weekend when it unveiled the show home at Derwenthorpe eco-village in Osbaldwick.

The three storey, five-bed Kestrel is bristling with radical technology, much of it never seen before in the region, including rainwater harvesting, modern insulation methods to reduce fuel bills and heating from a central biomass boiler.

The house also comes as a four-bedroom model which offers an opportunity to build up into the attic as the family grows, rather than having to move.

Following in their founder’s principles, JRHT’s new development will ultimately comprise 540 homes.

Half will be affordable properties, with 135 homes to rent, 81 for part-ownership and some designed for disabled and elderly people. All are set in 18 acres of parkland, with ponds, mature and newly planted trees, cycle paths, and wildlife conservation areas.

JRHT’s Nigel Ingram said: “There have been so few family homes built in York over the last ten years and the problem with developments is they are very exclusive.

“Does it have to be like that? We believe introducing options and a mixture in incomes and tenures is more sustainable and we are more interested in how flexible and adaptable your home is to your changing needs.”

The Derwenthorpe scheme was contested for more than a decade involving planning and legal challenges by local residents opposed to the loss of green-belt land and concerned about additional traffic on local roads.

One challenge even went to the European Commission.

Finally, the foundations were laid last summer and 64 homes are almost ready to move into. The first residents will collect their keys next month.

• Don’t miss The Press tomorrow, when we will be looking in more detail at Derwenthorpe eco-village.

Comments(7)

Mr Crabtree says...
1:59pm Tue 10 Apr 12

"Half will be affordable properties, with 135 homes to rent, 81 for part-ownership...."

216 out of 540 is not half, it's 40% !

Mr Crabtree says...
2:09pm Tue 10 Apr 12

The first phase started a year ago (Apr 2011), and they have only just managed to open a showhome, but, it says the '64 homes are almost ready to move into' ?

After a year how many have been sold ? The absence of the usual 'selling like hot cakes' marketing spiel, tells us they are not selling well. The rumour that David Wilson Homes are pulling out after the first phase maybe true afterall ? !!!

Yorklies says...
5:10pm Tue 10 Apr 12

200k for the cheapest means they are out of reach for most first time buyers

Mr Crabtree says...
8:33pm Tue 10 Apr 12

The photo in the Press shows why these houses are not selling. They are unattractive, totally out of proportion, and look as though they have been designed by a child. Joseph Rowntree and the planners have got this totally wrong. It truly is Disasterthorpe !

sheps lad says...
8:52pm Tue 10 Apr 12

Horrible! In the words of Sir David Frost "who lives in a house like this?"

anistasia says...
2:10pm Wed 11 Apr 12

good to see joro got some houses sold but does it affect the work force of joseph rowntree when things need mending will they use their own work force or put out to contractors it should make peoples jobs safe but will it .

dismasx says...
8:23pm Sat 14 Apr 12

Rather shocked at some of the negative comments here (vested interests perhaps?).

We looked around a show home on the site today and my wife and I think the designs are very clever and certainly to our taste. That said, I would agree that the prices seem rather steep particularly in the current climate.

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