Poplar HARCA

Poplar HARCA
Company, charity, housing association
Industry Social housing
Founded 13th September 1996 (13th September 1996)
Founder Steve Stride
Headquarters London, England
Area served
Poplar
Services Housing, community regeneration
£39 million (2011)
£9.3 million (2011)
Total assets £183 million (2011)
Number of employees
284 FTE (2011)
Website poplarharca.co.uk
Footnotes / references
Source: Statutory accounts
Brownfield Estate after redevelopment, 2014

Poplar HARCA (Housing and Regeneration Community Association) is a housing association in the East End of London, England. It is the landlord of about 9,000 homes in the Poplar area, a quarter of which have been sold leasehold; the remainder are let on assured tenancies at subsidised rent levels.

The association focuses on community regeneration as part of its core mission, with a Neighbourhood Centre on each estate. It is part of the Placeshapers network of housing associations and works on improving infrastructure, services, activities, employment, health and education in the area.[1]

History

Poplar HARCA was set up by the London Borough of Tower Hamlets to regenerate the area, especially certain Council estates whose residents voted to transfer to the new body. Parts of seven estates (about 4,500 homes) transferred to Poplar HARCA on 23rd March 1998. The following year, tenants on further estates voted to remain with the Council. However, after a lengthy consultation of all Council estates in Tower Hamlets begun in 2002, several more estates in Poplar did transfer between 2005 and 2007. The final ballots were on several estates in East India ward, with a 78% majority in favour of transfer in 2006,[2] including the iconic Balfron Tower; and Coventry Cross Estate with 65% in 2007.[3]

Reshaping Poplar

Poplar HARCA has refurbished all its existing housing stock and brought it up to standard. Its "Reshaping Poplar" agenda is a twelve-year plan to update, improve and replace this housing, developing hundreds of new homes, alongside parks, health and education facilities.[4] John Denham, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, met residents to discuss the plans in September 2009.[5]

In 2012 Poplar HARCA and Willmott Dixon obtained planning permission for a joint redevelopment of the Aberfeldy Estate. The plans include 1,100 new homes and improved amenities to be provided over 12 years.[6][7]

Management

The constitution allows for twelve board members including seven resident directors (tenants or leaseholders), one local councillor and up to four independent members. There are a further three Focus Committees: "Finance and General Purposes", "Services" and "Audit and Risk" . As of July 2014, the Chair of the main Poplar Board is Bernadette Conroy, and the Vice-Chair is Rev. James Olanipekun, a resident.[8]

Poplar HARCA has also formally incorporated youth empowerment into its management structure. Its Youth Empowerment Board is formally represented in the governance of the association.[9]

The Corporate Management Team, comprising Chief Executive Steve Stride and five directors, is responsible for the day-to-day functions of Poplar HARCA.

The Audit Commission's last inspection in 2007 awarded Poplar HARCA two stars out of three, with "promising prospects for improvement".[10]

Poplar Harca's Community and Neighbourhoods team (CaN), often in partnership with other associations, work on projects that help residents to find new jobs, empower them to improve their local area or develop and improve their physical, mental, emotional, social and educational wellbeing.[11]

Awards

References

  1. Poplar HARCA, Placeshapers website
  2. "Better quality of life", Tower Hamlets Council website, 18 Dec 2007. Retrieved 21 Jan 2008.
  3. "Coventry Cross Estate vote in favour to transfer to Poplar HARCA", Tower Hamlets website, 14 Dec 2007. Retrieved 21 Jan 2008.
  4. Reshaping Poplar Implementation Framework, Leaside Regeneration, 2009.
  5. Denham sees Poplar HARCA’s plans for the area, London Housing News, 14 Sep 2009
  6. Gavriel Hollander, East London regen project given green light, Inside Housing, 13 July 2012
  7. Aberfeldy Village, Casey Fierro Architects
  8. Board members on Poplar HARCA website
  9. ‘We don’t really do it like that, dear’, Inside Housing, 27 Nov 2009
  10. Inspection report by the Audit Commission. Retrieved 12 Oct 2009.
  11. CaN annual report Popar HARCA 2012/13
  12. 24housing Power Players List, 24Housing
  13. Sustainable Housing Awards 2013, Inside Housing
  14. UKHA 2013 Finalists, CIH.org
  15. Sustainable Housing Award 2012, Inside Housing
  16. The ASBActionNet Awards 2011, Lemos & Crane.
  17. ASB ActionNet Award shortlist. Lemos & Crane.
  18. Tenants evicted for bad behaviour, BBC, 30 September 2009
  19. We are family: Poplar's Family Intervention Project is giving minor offenders a chance to get back on track, The Guardian, 25 Nov 2009
  20. New Year honours list: MBEs, The Guardian, 31 Dec 2008
  21. Hall of fame, Inside Housing, 27 Mar 2009
  22. 'Residents will not tolerate this', profile of Christine Searle in "Housing Horizons", The Guardian, 10 Feb 2009
  23. 2007 Gold Awards on Housing Corporation website
  24. 2006 Awards on NHF website
  25. 2006 Green Pennant, Countryside.gov.uk. Retrieved 8 Oct 2007.
  26. 2004 Winners on CIH website. Retrieved 8 Oct 2008.
  27. BURA 2001 winners, sponsored by English Partnerships
  28. Countryside PLC wins award for Burdett Estate
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