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£3million Blackburn housing estate fails to sell

10:33pm Tuesday 29th April 2008

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Photograph of the Author By Tom Moseley »

A NEW housing estate in Blackburn worth almost £3million has been fenced off with barbed wire after none of the homes sold in two years.

Residents said the 20 house-block has become an eyesore and a magnet for vandals.

A six-foot high fence topped with barbed wire has been erected around the patch of land in a residential area off Hamilton Street, in the Infirmary area of Blackburn.

Council bosses said they had no power to step in and persuade the site owner to finish the job.

The tightly-grouped three and four bedroom houses were put on the market for £119,950 to £137,500 but failed to sell.

It is thought the owner is now trying to sell the entire complex, which is just yards from the site of a new development under the Elevate regeneration scheme that will bring hundreds more homes to the area.

The houses appear to be finished, although the front gardens are overgrown. A police notice warns against vandalism, but graffiti has been scrawled on some of the walls and many of the windows are boarded up.

There is still building equipment on the grassy area in the middle of the block, which has become overgrown with weeds.

Natalie Hudson, 25, of Grafton Street, said: "They should knock them all down. All the kids smash the windows, and it's been like that for about two years.

"They are an eyesore now, and just like shoe boxes. They stopped even putting glass back in the windows.

"There used to be a guard and a guard dog but they've not been seen for six months."

The site used to be a nursing home which was boarded up for a number of years, she added.

Herbert Street resident June Clarke, 45, added: "They were building them two years ago. They went up fairly quickly, then it all came to a standstill.

"It's like a ghost town now. There is nobody in there at all. They are just completely empty and getting vandalised every day. So many people in this area want houses and they are all there standing empty.

"It has become an eyesore. Residents just want to know what's going on and why nothing has happened."

Estate agent Reeds Rains advertises the houses, which have fitted kitchens and bathrooms already built in, on its website.

But the manager of its Blackburn branch, who did not want to be named, said none of the homes had been sold.

He said: "People have been put off by the actual look of the development.

"The site is under negotiation to be sold as a whole development.

"He just wants to sell the whole lot as it stands there."

He would not confirm the identity of the site owner.

A Manchester-based firm, Milstream Ltd, was given planning permission to build the houses in 2005, but the company could not be contacted by the Lancashire Telegraph.

The agent listed on the planning application, Rochdale-based IM Conway, did not respond when asked to comment.

Neil Rodgers, head of planning at Blackburn with Darwen council, said while the council had powers to ensure a development started after a certain time it could not enforce a finishing time.

He added: "Officers from building control have not signed off the development because it is not yet finished.

"However, officers have written to the owners, who put in the original application, to inform them that the council has received complaints from residents and they need to keep the site secure."

Your Say YourTelegraph

Johnnyboy, Beautiful Blackburn says...
7:55pm Thu 15 May 08

The lockmill development on the former kwicksave site looks another disastrous development were the builder has produced an awful overcrowded design.

What is this town coming to, is the BRI development going to be another overcrowded overpriced awfully designed development.

Smart, Not far says...
5:27pm Thu 1 May 08

Well maybe if they give me a house others will buy they just need a little TLC:))if all are empty it says a lot,Better to give 1 away hmmm

debs, b/burn says...
8:35pm Wed 30 Apr 08

many people cannot aford to buy so why not rent them out it sorts one problem ..

Levin, Colne says...
12:07pm Wed 30 Apr 08

As I understand the situation developers are forced by central government planning guidelines to cram as many houses on a plot of land as possible.

This is, of course, plain barmy and removes any form of local discretion.

Looking at the style of the houses one must agree with those who consider them to be unattractive; and the pricing of them beggars all belief.

They are, I suppose, emblematic of what happens towards the end of a speculative boom - all sorts of 'crack-pot' schemes get put forward and in the end some of them crash.

marie cousens, NZ says...
10:26am Wed 30 Apr 08

I didn't mean "lick up"
(It's 9:20p.m. here) I meant, look like. Another thing I have just noticed too, is why make a stand out "feature" of painting the drainpipes black! They should have been painted the same brick colour to hide them. On our house our drainpipes are concealed behind the natural stonework of our house - but still serviceable. Also the roof overhangs don't seem to be deep enough to shade the windows (very few of them by the looks too). Hey they are just horrible aren't they. Wonder if they were rough plastered over to make them look less "bricky looking". I bet the stairs to the upstairs rooms are steep and narrow too? Bye for now, Marie

marie cousens, Ashburton, New Zealand says...
10:17am Wed 30 Apr 08

Yes, they do look lick up on end shoe boxes. In view of a shortage of houses there, a new buyer could modify the fronts at least, making each one slightly different with porches, trellising, curved pathways to each and a bit of "privacy fencing" to each one. What idot allowed the design to go ahead in the first place, cramming so many places onto handkerchief sized land????!! For the lowest price of 119,950 pounds, you could buy a beautiful house here where I live in Ashburton, South Island of NZ - equivalent money in NZ $359,850 with 3 - 4 bedrooms probably a 1/4 acre, or more nicely fenced and lovely gardens too, I'm so sorry that you have all that ....t! happening over there.! Kindest Regards, Marie .

The Worker, says...
10:16am Wed 30 Apr 08

I am astonished, not one house sold. There has to be a very good reason, why? Area, size of properties and no doubt grossly overpriced. Maybe the hired the wrong estate agnet?

Johnnyboy, Blackburn says...
10:05am Wed 30 Apr 08

What do you expect with such an awful design-layout of these buildings.

They are awful and need pulling down and starting again,Blackburn cant afford too take more backward steps like this one.

Demolish them and start again, its criminal when you see that the Harrison buidings were pulled down and these shacks were erected closeby.

These buldings have nothing in common with modern living its seems as though the builder quite wrongly tried to get as many houses on a small plot of land and charge a high price for his shoddy work that thankfully nobody in Blackburn bought into the scheme.

soap opera, coronation st says...
10:42pm Tue 29 Apr 08

its at least 1/2 mile away not yards.no one will move into a site were the windows are smashed daily

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FENCE: Houses off Hamilton Street, in the Infirmary area of Blackburn FENCE: Houses off Hamilton Street, in the Infirmary area of Blackburn

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