More from Town & Country Housing Group
- Town & Country beats credit crunch with £150 million deal
- Seafront eyesore transformed by Town & Country
- Town & Country gets creative at the Tunbridge Wells Mela
- Credit crunch could cause rise in domestic abuse
- Town & Country Foundation celebrates local volunteers with awards
Advertisement
One of Thanets most well-known eyesores, which had been in disrepair for over 20 years, has been brought into use as affordable housing, after more than a years worth of work to convert it.
The property at 77 Eastern Esplanade has been a key target of Thanet District Councils empty properties campaign in recent years, after it became a major problem with serious structural defects. Protective scaffolding had to be erected around the property to protect the public from falling masonry. Two dangerous chimney stacks that were leaning precariously had to be demolished.
The owner had died some time before and ownership had passed to various family members throughout Saudi Arabia. After failing to track them down, the council was left to foot the bill for the work carried out.
This was then registered as charges against the property at the Land Registry, giving the council the opportunity to use a law dating back over 80 years, thought to be the first time it had been used in Kent.
Supported by the No Use Empty campaign, a sale was enforced on the property in April 2007. Town & Country Housing Group, one of the councils preferred affordable housing partners, has refurbished the four one and two bedroom flats, which will are being offered on a shared ownership basis.
When work started, the property was boarded up, with windows missing and major infestation by pigeons in the upper floors. Due to missing slates from the roof, water had been pouring through the property for a number of years, causing serious decay, including dry and wet rot.
Cllr. Zita Wiltshire, Cabinet Member for Housing, said: Its all too easy for people to look at derelict buildings and wonder why nothing appears to be happening for so long, but all too often, our officers are having to deal with complex problems before work can finally get underway.
Here, in just over a year, Town and Country Housing have done a superb job in renovating what was a dangerous and damaged building into homes that can offer a first step on the property ladder for local people.
Tim Warren, Town & Country's new business manager, said: "This really has been quite a remarkable transformation. The property was an absolute blot on the landscape, but now offers wonderful homes, with sea views, at affordable prices."
The flats range in price from £100,000 to £140,000. Purchasers can buy as little as a 25% share and pay a rent of 2.7% on the remaining portion.
The UK's most up-to-date social housing and public sector news website

Community Development Assistant
