Brother, 20, sleeps in his car for nine nights to help his sister buy a home on Waterloo Road estate

Desperate house buyers have been sleeping in a queue of cars for up to ten nights to get their hands on a home at a new Rochdale housing development – where the mortgage repayments are just £54 a week. 

Using relatives to do ‘shifts’ in the parked cars and ordering pizza to their vehicles, the prospective home owners, kitted out with sleeping bags, have been ‘camping’ outside the Gleeson Homes sales office near the Kirkholt estate for approaching two weeks. 

Car-sleepers are in line to bag themselves a two-bed property for just over £100,000 available with a deposit of only £5,000 through the government help-to-buy scheme. 

The first car in the line has their eye on the Conrad Court development, plot no.1

Line of cars wait outside the Gleeson's sales office on the Kirkholt estate, Rochdale

Line of cars wait outside the Gleeson’s sales office on the Kirkholt estate, Rochdale

The Hill Top Park development is built on land where the famous BBC One Waterloo road school once stood and offers impressively affordable homes.   

CEO of Gleeson Jolyon Harrison claims the demand on this estate is due to the fact that council house rent in the area is around £30 more expensive per week than the mortgage repayments on a new build house with the government help-to-buy scheme. 

A large three-bed detached property on the estate is available for £160,000, with just a five percent deposit of £8,000. 

The eagerly awaited properties are not yet on sale despite the demand as developers choose not to sell them until they are built to ‘ground floor slab level’. 

20-year-old Kef has been in the queue for nine-days to help his sister buy a house

20-year-old Kef has been in the queue for nine-days to help his sister buy a house

Kef displays signs on his dashboard detailing which property he wants to buy

Kef displays signs on his dashboard detailing which property he wants to buy

20-year-old Kef, (pictured in black Audi), who has been waiting in the Queue for nine days to help his sister buy a house said: ‘We are doing eight hour shifts, it’s so cold I’ve almost used all of my petrol on the heating.

‘This is the most bizarre thing I’ve ever seen, but worryingly I’ve just been told I might have to sit here for six weeks.

‘I am waiting to buy a house named The Fergus.’

Osama, who has also been waiting in the queue nine days to buy a house said: ‘I’m relying on my family to bring me meals throughout the day which is difficult because it’s Ramadan.  

‘We are getting no help from the sales office.

‘I’m trying to buy a property called The Kilkenny.’ 

Fiesty would-be house buyers have stuck makeshift signs in their car windows pointing out their position in the queue – in case someone is thinking about pushing in – and letting other punters know which plot they call dibs on. 

A man beds down in a sleeping back for the ninth day waiting in the car to bag a property

A man beds down in a sleeping back for the ninth day waiting in the car to bag a property

The eager punters are eyeing a new home at the sought-after Hill Top Park development, where new two, three and four bed properties are going up on the site of a former primary school where the BBC drama Waterloo Road was filmed.

The main attraction appears to be the price – Gleeson doesn’t list any prices on its website, but the would-be buyers camping out claim three-bed properties are sold for around £160,000.

Charities say Britain is in the grip of an affordable housing ‘crisis’, with young people and those on low incomes struggling to get on the housing ladder. 

Would-be buyers camping out claim three-bed properties are sold for around £160,000

Would-be buyers camping out claim three-bed properties are sold for around £160,000

Kitchen diner of a property at the new build development, with patio doors opening on to a garden

Kitchen diner of a property at the new build development, with patio doors opening on to a garden

Taking turns the punters are roping in relatives to do shifts waiting in line in the cars

Taking turns the punters are roping in relatives to do shifts waiting in line in the cars

On Thursday, there were four vehicles parked outside the sales office and which appeared to belong to prospective customers who had been sleeping overnight.

One young mother from Oldham said she had used a roster of relatives, including her husband to do ‘shifts’ in the car since Monday.

So far, her family has spent three nights in the car. She said she expected they would have to remain there until next week or even the week after, depending on when Gleeson releases the as-yet unpriced property she is interested in.

The land Hill Top Park is built on was once home to the famous BBC One Waterloo Road school

The land Hill Top Park is built on was once home to the famous BBC One Waterloo Road school  

Two, three and four bed properties are going up on the site of a former primary school where the BBC drama Waterloo Road was filmed

Two, three and four bed properties are going up on the site of a former primary school where the BBC drama Waterloo Road was filmed

Dedicated buyers wait in line to secure themselves an affordable home in Rochdale

Dedicated buyers wait in line to secure themselves an affordable home in Rochdale

The woman, who asked not to be named, said: ‘It’s going to be next week or the week after. They are not telling us when they will be released. 

‘I’m hoping it will probably be next week.’

She went on: ‘Honestly, its the worst procedure. Why don’t they just release all the houses so people can come and reserve a plot they want rather than people queueing up in a car?

‘It’s just a ridiculous process.’ 

Builders work on the unfinished Kirkholt estate, as people line up to buy homes

Builders work on the unfinished Kirkholt estate, as people line up to buy homes

'Campers' are using sleeping bags and hot water bottles to keep comfortable outside

‘Campers’ are using sleeping bags and hot water bottles to keep comfortable outside

One buyer claimed she has heard of another would-be purchaser who slept on the street for nine nights

One buyer claimed she has heard of another would-be purchaser who slept on the street for nine nights

She claimed she has heard of another would-be purchaser who slept on the street for nine nights.

The woman is waiting for the house she is interested to reach ‘stage four’, when the foundations have been dug and the first two rows of bricks have been laid.

The sign she has erected in her own car says she is first in the queue and she says the manager in the sales officer has agreed this.

Why the demand? 

With local rent in Rochdale, Greater Manchester at an average price of £632 per calendar month for a three bedroom house, its possible that mortgage payments on a £160,000 property with a 25 year term would be cheaper – with the added bonus of owning the property.

Gleeson claims: ‘We have a huge demand for our homes on many of our sites because it is usually cheaper to buy a Gleeson home than to rent one locally.’

Nearby residents, who are already living in their homes aren’t happy either, although they have tried to help by, for instance, by topping up hot water bottles.

One neighbour said: ‘I don’t particularly like that they are sleeping outside my house, but there’s nothing I can do.’

The resident reported that she first noticed people sleeping in their cars outside the sales officer in the new year. 

‘I’ve been offering anything I can, anything they need,’ she added.

‘We didn’t have to do that when we got our house. We called and put down a reserve. We were the first ones in.’

She said she has seen pizza boxes, suggesting some of those in the queue had arranged for food to be delivered.

A second would-be buyer in her car, a mother-of-two young children, said: ‘It’s first come first served. Somebody else can come in (to the queue) if you are not here.’ 

A man waits in his Mercedes at Hill Top Park, some punters are believed to have been there for ten days

A man waits in his Mercedes at Hill Top Park, some punters are believed to have been there for ten days

She suggested a booking system would be a better alternative.

A statement from Gleeson read: ‘We have a huge demand for our homes on many of our sites because it is usually cheaper to buy a Gleeson home than to rent one locally.

‘The problem that we have is that someone is always disappointed in not achieving what would otherwise be a very positive life-changing experience.

‘We cannot stop people sleeping in cars and we have previously tried a ticketing system, but who gets the first ticket and how?

‘We sincerely wish that we could provide a house to everyone who wants one and we are sorry if any of our potential customers are disappointed.’

 

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