Common Ground: Difference between revisions

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'''= course and report'''


=Course=


Common Ground is a report on [[Mutual Home Ownership]]
Clara Gromaches:


"A six week learning journey with 100 people over two tracks: one for participants of rural and urban CLT projects worldwide to learn about web3; and a separate track for web3 contributors to learn from the long history of CLTs to support local community land development and stewardship."


URL = http://open.coop/tiki-download_wiki_attachment.php?attId=10
(https://common-ground.super.site/course)




=Description=
=Report=


Common Ground is a report on [[Mutual Home Ownership]]


From the report at http://open.coop/tiki-download_wiki_attachment.php?attId=10
URL = http://open.coop/tiki-download_wiki_attachment.php?attId=10




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Against this background, the Common Ground proposals are timely and significant. They are based on a structure that captures increasing land value for the benefit of local communities, so that initial investment creates affordable housing opportunities for successive generations. It aims to do this in a way which avoids both the original disadvantage of council housing – an inability to move on to ownership – but also the penalty inherent in the right to buy, which confers advantage on the first buyer at the expense of future generations. The ownership of the land remains permanently in trust, while occupiers gain access to homes, which are affordable now, and equity shares later connect them to the wider housing market."
Against this background, the Common Ground proposals are timely and significant. They are based on a structure that captures increasing land value for the benefit of local communities, so that initial investment creates affordable housing opportunities for successive generations. It aims to do this in a way which avoids both the original disadvantage of council housing – an inability to move on to ownership – but also the penalty inherent in the right to buy, which confers advantage on the first buyer at the expense of future generations. The ownership of the land remains permanently in trust, while occupiers gain access to homes, which are affordable now, and equity shares later connect them to the wider housing market."


(http://open.coop/tiki-download_wiki_attachment.php?attId=10)
[[Category:Housing]]
[[Category:Courses]]
[[Category:Peerproperty]]


[[Category:Peerproperty]]
[[Category:Articles]]
[[Category:Articles]]
[[Category:Commons]]

Latest revision as of 10:10, 1 February 2025

= course and report

Course

Clara Gromaches:

"A six week learning journey with 100 people over two tracks: one for participants of rural and urban CLT projects worldwide to learn about web3; and a separate track for web3 contributors to learn from the long history of CLTs to support local community land development and stewardship."

(https://common-ground.super.site/course)


Report

Common Ground is a report on Mutual Home Ownership

URL = http://open.coop/tiki-download_wiki_attachment.php?attId=10


"Community land trusts and shared equity co-operatives to secure permanently affordable homes for key workers

The Joseph Rowntree Foundation’s Land Inquiry (2002) called for fresh thinking on new forms of tenure between the twin poles of renting and ownership, noting that permanent renting failed to meet the aspirations of most people, while ownership in many areas was out of their reach.

Against this background, the Common Ground proposals are timely and significant. They are based on a structure that captures increasing land value for the benefit of local communities, so that initial investment creates affordable housing opportunities for successive generations. It aims to do this in a way which avoids both the original disadvantage of council housing – an inability to move on to ownership – but also the penalty inherent in the right to buy, which confers advantage on the first buyer at the expense of future generations. The ownership of the land remains permanently in trust, while occupiers gain access to homes, which are affordable now, and equity shares later connect them to the wider housing market."

(http://open.coop/tiki-download_wiki_attachment.php?attId=10)