BusinessBlackwood hands over 10 homes to help with Edinburgh housing crisis

Blackwood hands over 10 homes to help with Edinburgh housing crisis

TEN specialist homes have been handed over to the City of Edinburgh Council to help it address its housing crisis.

Blackwood Homes and Care has offered up the properties to assist the Council, which is in the midst of a profound housing shortage.

As a specialist in providing homes which enable those with disabilities or age-related condition to live as independently as possible, Blackwood has more than 1,500 properties across Scotland.

Doug Moyes, Director of Customer Service at Blackwood said: “We have a small number of vacant properties in Edinburgh at the moment, so when the city announced it was suffering a housing emergency, we immediately made those available to help.

“We appreciate this is a relatively small number, but when there is a housing emergency, every available property can make a huge difference to the lives of those most badly affected.

“We are pleased that our long and strong working relationship with Edinburgh Council has enabled us to turn this around so quickly and look forward to seeing new tenants in the properties.”

Eight of the 10 properties handed over to the city council are specially adapted homes for wheelchair users or other people with mobility issues – and could be ideal for potential tenants being discharged from hospital or with other emergency needs.

Blackwood will work closely with the Council’s Access to Housing team to ensure the properties go to suitable tenants, thereby freeing up properties elsewhere in the housing chain to help ease Edinburgh’s burgeoning homelessness problems.

Earlier this month Edinburgh officially declared a housing emergency, becoming the first city in Scotland to do so.

The capital has 5,000 households in temporary accommodation, the highest number in Scotland.

Jane Meagher, Edinburgh’s Housing Convener, called for an emergency action plan, seeking urgent funding from the Scottish Government to help meet “severe challenges”.

The Council cited record homelessness numbers, a severe shortage of social rented homes and rocketing private rent rates.

Councillor Jane Meagher, Housing, Homelessness and Fair Work Convener, said: “We very much appreciate the offer of these 10 homes, which means we will be able to quickly move tenants with mobility needs into more suitable accommodation.

“The Council has worked directly with Blackwood over a number of years, especially with regards to delayed hospital discharge, and we are grateful for this assistance in light of the exceptional housing pressures within the city.

“We all need to work together to address Edinburgh’s housing emergency.”

The 10 homes being provided by Blackwood are in Craigmount, Abbeyhill and Portobello.

The specialist properties have features including wet room bathrooms and adaptable kitchens, with two of the properties classed as general housing.

Many Blackwood properties feature its CleverCogs technology which is personalised and links users to care and health services, home automation, local information, entertainment, and video access to family and friends.

Over the next five years Blackwood aims to build 400 such homes, that can adapt to tenants’ future needs.

Each can be adapted to include a host of benefits such as lift access, remotely controlled automated functions, and digital care and housing systems.

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