Here is the dream, if you can afford it: gleaming apartments, close to Liverpool’s waterfront, complete with penthouse swimming pools and luxurious rooftop gardens. They are mostly bought by overseas investors who then rent them to local professionals. Yet just ten minutes’ walk away, a very different spectacle unfolds, where a charity hands out food to queues of people every Monday night, with the reported need having doubled since last year.
According to the housing charity Shelter, in the 12 months leading up to March 2025, Liverpool city council received 2,048 applications for homelessness support, a 25% increase on the previous year. The most recent data shows 12,764 households on the city’s social housing waiting list. But one figure is particularly shocking: the city’s “additional social rent dwellings” in 2023-24 totalled – and read this slowly – five.Faced with the inadequacy of national solutions, grassroots efforts in Liverpool are taking action. This is the focus of a brilliantly energised new campaign called Help – House Everyone in Liverpool Properly. It keeps its collective eye on the city’s gleaming new developments, and also wants to steer the local conversation about housing away from blaming outsiders: the city’s crisis, they say, should bring people together rather than pulling them apart.
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