Read our latest Hough Top community newsletter here.
Our team of housing experts is working with Leeds City Council to deliver a scheme that is easing housing pressures in Leeds by providing dozens of affordable council homes.
The Hough Top scheme is delivering a total of 82 high-quality, energy-efficient homes on a former school site in Swinnow, near Pudsey – and has now reached a key milestone, with the first seven homes completed and handed over to tenants. Work is proceeding at pace on the rest of the development, with full completion expected in winter 2026.
The scheme, which is being delivered via Leeds's Council Housing Growth Programme (CHGP) with funding support from West Yorkshire Combined Authority's Brownfield Housing Fund, comprises 55 houses and 27 apartments, with a mix of one, two, three and four bedrooms. The apartments sit within a new three-storey building named Hough Top Court, with the site's roads named Hough Common, Hough Fold and Hough Drive.
The homes are suitable for adaptation and fitted with individual air source heat pumps – a sustainable heating solution that helps cut carbon emissions, tackle fuel poverty and give tenants welcome assistance with the cost of living.
All the properties are being made available for affordable rent, giving an important helping hand to families in a part of Leeds that has significant housing needs.
Around 4,500 square metres of public open space is also being created at the 2.5-hectare site, which had lain empty since the demolition of the former Hough Side High School buildings in 2021 and 2022.
Driving social mobility
The development is also benefiting the wider community by creating a range of employment, skills and apprenticeship opportunities through a tie-in programme of social value activity, including apprentice training weeks, school engagement and career mentoring for local people. Our focus here includes 125 apprentice weeks, nearly 75 school engagement hours and nearly 80 career mentoring hours.
We led the pre-construction work at the site, which was earmarked for housing use in Leeds's Site Allocations Plan, a key planning policy document adopted by the council in 2019. Located in an established residential area, it has good access to public transport, green space and local services.
The majority of the funding for the scheme is being provided by the council's housing service via Right to Buy receipts and borrowing, with £1.64m of grant support coming from the West Yorkshire Combined Authority's Brownfield Housing Fund.