LewishamNews

Squatters ‘priced out’ of rental market camping outside abandoned care home they were evicted from

By Robert Firth, Local Democracy Reporter

A group of people are sleeping outside an abandoned care centre in hammocks and tents after a council called police to boot them out of the building they had turned into a squat.

The squatters were ordered to leave the ex-residential care building in Lewisham by officers last Friday or face arrest.

They say they are priced out of the London rental market and were staying in the empty building in Slaithwaite Road to avoid becoming homeless.

The squatters have nowhere to store their items (Picture: Robert Firth)

But Lewisham council wants to turn the property, known locally as House on the Hill, into affordable living and a work space with the help of businessman Simon Higgs.

Mr Higgs runs the V22 Foundation, a not-for-profit arts group that provides affordable work space, mainly in South and east London.

The council confirmed it worked “in partnership with the police” to take back the property from the squatters.

But the building’s former residents are calling on the council to let them return, and said they would continue camping outside the property until they are allowed to do so.

Speaking from a makeshift camp erected outside the centre on Wednesday, one of the squatters, who only gave the name Biribá, 25, said: “On Friday, the police knocked on the door and my friend tried to speak to them through the letterbox. They said ‘you have to leave and take all your stuff’.

“There was a bit of a scuffle outside and we didn’t know what we were going to do. On the first night we didn’t manage to get all our stuff, and within 12 hours some of our stuff was damaged and stolen. We’ve been here since.”

The squatters were living in an empty former care centre in Slaithwaite Road, Lewisham (Picture: Robert Firth)

Biribá said that some of the people squatting in the building had an unclear immigration status, meaning they could be kicked out of the country by the Home Office.

As a result, some of the ex-residents have now fled to insecure housing elsewhere in the capital.

He added: “Nobody is in stable housing. People are spread across the city and we have between six and seven people sleeping here between the tents, the beds and the hammocks.”

The median monthly rent for a room in Lewisham was £750 as of March, according to the Office for National Statistics. In 2019, the median rent for a room in the borough was just £575.

Research from housing charity Shelter, published in January, revealed there were 7,300 homeless people in Lewisham. This figure includes people in temporary accommodation or sleeping on the streets.

A Lewisham council spokesman said: “House on the Hill is a previous residential care facility in Lewisham, which we are intending to convert into affordable living/work space for the local community.

“The building was recently occupied illegally by squatters who gained entry in the brief period when the property was unoccupied. This is a Lewisham council-owned public property and we have had to act swiftly, in partnership with the police and within clear legislation, to protect the council’s assets.”

The Met was contacted for comment but directed enquires back to Lewisham council.

Pictured top: The squatters are now sleeping in hammocks and tents outside their former home in Lewisham (Picture: Robert Firth)


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