Labour to pledge to start building three new towns as Housing Secretary says 'build, baby, build'
Steve Reed will pledge that his will "do whatever it takes to get Britain building" on the opening day of the annual gathering in Liverpool
The Housing Secretary will pledge to 'build, baby, build' as he announces Labour will break ground on three new towns before the next general election in a speech on day one of the party's conference.
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Steve Reed will pledge that his will "do whatever it takes to get Britain building" on the opening day of the annual gathering in Liverpool.
He will promise that Tempsford in Bedfordshire, Leeds South Bank, and Crews Hill, north London, will begin construction as the "most promising sites" of the 12 which were planned in Labour's manifesto.
Work on 12 new towns will be taken forward, Mr Reed is to announce, as recommended by a report from the Government's New Towns Taskforce, published on Sunday morning.
Each of the dozen new towns will have at least 10,000 homes, and could collectively result in 300,000 houses being built across England.
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Mr Reed is expected to welcome a recommendation by the New Towns Taskforce that at least 40% of these new homes should be affordable.
In its manifesto, Labour pledged to begin work on 1.5 million new homes over the course of the Parliament, to expand homeownership to more Britons.
In his speech at Labour conference, Housing Secretary Steve Reed is expected to say: "We will fight for hard working people, locked out of a secure home for too long by the Conservative government of blockers.
"This Labour Government won't sit back and let this happen. I will do whatever it takes to get Britain building. We've got to 'build baby build'."
In a nod to the new towns programme established by Clement Attlee's post-war Labour government, Mr Reed will add: "This party built new towns after the war to meet our promise of homes fit for heroes.
"Now, with the worst economic inheritance since that war, we will once again build cutting-edge communities to provide homes fit for families of all shapes and sizes.
"I am launching the next generation of new towns taking the lessons from the post-war Labour government housing boom... mobilising the full power of the state to build a new generation of new towns and restore the dream of home ownership to thousands of families across the country."
Ahead of the speech, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said: "For so many families, homeownership is a distant dream.
"My Labour Government will sweep aside the blockers to get homes built, building the next generation of new towns."
Among the steps Labour plans to take to speed up housing development is a "New Towns Unit", aimed at pumping both private and public cash into transport links, GP surgeries, schools and open green spaces in its new settlements.
The Unit will work with leading architects to ensure the new towns have their own unique character and identity, intended to reflect their local area.
Ministers also plan to model the construction and planning effort behind each town on the regeneration of Stratford, east London, before and after the 2012 Olympic games.
The Olympic park, and the surrounding housing, was overseen by a development corporation, a body with sweeping powers which allowed it to compulsorily purchase land and grant planning permission.
While some of the new towns Labour plans to build will be standalone settlements, others will be expansions of existing towns, or new areas within cities.
The 12 planned new towns include:
- A standalone settlement in Adlington, Cheshire East, which would serve growing industries in the county and Greater Manchester.
- Connected developments across South Gloucestershire, near a cluster of advanced engineering and technology businesses.
- Crews Hill, near Enfield, north London.
- Redeveloping a former airbase at Heyford Park, Cherwell, Oxfordshire.
- The Leeds South Bank development, aimed at building new homes for the city, where ministers have invested millions in new transport funding.
- New homes in Victoria North, inner Manchester.
- A standalone settlement in Marlcombe, East Devon.
- Renewal of Milton Keynes city centre and expanding its periphery, alongside a new mass transit system.
- New, dense development in Plymouth.
- The new town in Tempsford, Bedfordshire, which lies at the crossroads of the East-West rail line and the East Coast Mainline railway.
- A new riverside settlement in Thamesmead, Greenwich.
- More development at Worcestershire Parkway, Wychavon.
Just last week, Mr Reed laid out what he described as a "building acceleration package" in light of the slow growth in housebuilding figures.
Some 80,400 applications were received in the period between April and June 2025, down 5% from the previous year.
Planning authorities across the nation decided 80,800 applications, down 1% from the same period the previous year.
Mr Reed described the numbers as "unacceptable".