Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities will change building regulations to strengthen rules
New homes will be required to have step-free access to all entrance level rooms under beefed up standards for accessible homes, the government has announced.
The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities will change building regulations to strengthen rules around the accessibility features new homes must have.
Following a consultation, DLUHC said it will mandate the existing 鈥渙ptional鈥 M4 category 2 requirement for all new dwelllings.
This requirement, which calls for homes to have step-free access and other features to make them easily adaptable, currently only applies when planners have requested them as conditions. The new requirement will replace the current mandatory 鈥渃ategory 1鈥, a lower standard that ensures properties are capable of being visited by a wide range of people including wheelchair users.
DLUHC said 98% of around 400 responses to the consultation were in favour of the change.
Eddie Hughes, minister for rough sleeping and housing, said: 鈥淥lder and disabled people must have homes which are suitable for their needs, and allow them to live comfortably and independently.
鈥淭his consultation has made clear raising the accessibility standard of new homes is supported not just by people who use accessible homes, but by industry and wider stakeholders as well. With that mandate, we are forging ahead with the next steps to make this a reality.鈥
The proposed change was described as a 鈥渧ictory鈥 by Christina McGill, director of social impact and external affairs at accessible homes specialist housing association Habinteg.
McGill said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 encouraging to see this announcement after seven years of campaigning. Raising the mandatory access standard will remove many of the barriers currently limiting the number of accessible and adaptable homes being built and help deliver great quality inclusive housing that suits a wide range of people.鈥
McGill added that local authorities should 鈥渟tart thinking about how they will be able to use freed up resources to plan for sufficient wheelchair standard housing.鈥
However a Habinteg spokesperson said the association regretted that the government does not plan to bring in a national requirement for a minimum proportion of homes to be built to a wheelchair accessible standard.
A second consultation will now be carried out on the detail of the changes and on the circumstances where exceptions to the rule should apply.
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