2 years ago | 2 comments
John Lewis is shutting down its housebuilding arm and abandoning plans to deliver 1,000 rental homes across three sites.
The firm is blaming higher borrowing and construction costs since the venture was launched in 2020.
The employee-owned retailer said the decision also covers an exit from property management when four residential building contracts expire.
Resources will instead be redirected towards its core retail brands, John Lewis and Waitrose, as the partnership looks to simplify operations and reinforce its balance sheet.
A spokesperson for the John Lewis Partnership said: “Our rental property ambition was based on a very different financial environment: one with more stable investment returns, lower borrowing costs and more affordable costs to build homes.
“Unfortunately, the current climate – higher interest rates, inflationary pressures and a more cautious property market – has meant the model no longer meets the Partnership’s investment criteria.”
Its move ends a £500m build-to-rent initiative spanning Bromley, Reading and West Ealing, where schemes had been designed to deliver large-scale rental housing.
The withdrawal follows several years of repositioning inside the partnership’s retail estate, including job reductions and store closures.
Five years ago, the partnership outlined proposals to build as many as 10,000 rental homes, targeting 40% of profits from non-retail activity by 2030.
Development pipelines included construction above Waitrose supermarkets and regeneration of underused land.
Planning consent had been secured in principle across the three current schemes.
However, the Bromley proposals ran into difficulty after affordable housing numbers fell short of early expectations.
Also, the Reading project drew objections from residents concerned about pressure on local infrastructure.
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Member Since September 2022 - Comments: 192
4:12 PM, 27th February 2026, About 1 month ago
The Renters Rights Act will hurt Build to Rent schemes country wide.
Labour will of course build the 1,500,000 new energy efficient homes they promised
Don’t hold your breath
Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 765
8:49 PM, 27th February 2026, About 1 month ago
See it is not easy to make loads of cash with no effort – we have seen loads of Council spin off housing companies evicting everyone quickly before the bill, as well as the NHS and the Police.
One MP claimed there was not a cliff edge, odd that everyone else can see it.