New Homes IN New Ways SUMMIT 2025

12th and 13th February

 

Speakers

The Summit is now over. If you’d like to stay in the loop about post-summit actions or receive the recordings, please register your interest.

Meet the speakers by scrolling through the gallery below, or download a pdf version with full speaker bios.

 
 
  • The registration desk and cloakroom open at 10am on Wednesday, and 8:30am on Thursday.

    Both days include refreshments and lunch.

    Finding the Building Centre:

    By public transport

    The Building Centre is within walking distance of several mainline railway stations. Euston (15 mins), King's Cross / St Pancras (25 mins), Charing Cross (23 mins).

    Nearest underground stations are Goodge Street (Northern Line) Tottenham Court Road (Northern, Central and Elizabeth Lines), Euston Square (Circle, District and Metropolitan Lines), Russell Square (Piccadilly Line) and Warren Street (Victoria Line). 

    The Building Centre is well served by bus routes from all directions. For details of the most appropriate route for your journey visit www.tfl.gov.uk/journeyplanner

    By road

    Store Street is a one-way street accessed from Tottenham Court Road. Visitors can be dropped off at the front door of the Building Centre and limited metered street parking is available in adjacent streets with several NCP car parks nearby.

    Store Street is in a Congestion Charge Zone

    By bike

    There is a cycle hire station immediately outside the Building Centre and limited unsheltered bicycle parking is available in Store Street. Visitors using folding bicycles can store them inside.

 

The New Homes in New Ways series was produced in partnership with the Building Centre.

 

Summit Sponsors

Principal Exhibition Sponsors

 

Exhibition sponsors

Collaborators

Charity Partners

Education Partner

 

© Chris Jackson

 

New Homes in New Ways Exhibition

The New Homes in New Ways exhibition is now open at the Building Centre, London. This interactive exhibition shines a light on the UK’s deficit of social rent homes and the growing temporary accommodation crisis. But the exhibition does not stop there - it will take you on a journey from despair to hope. The Building Centre is open to the public five days a week and all exhibitions are free to enter. Find out more.

 

What people are saying

  • Jez Sweetland, Housing Festival 

     “The New Homes in New Ways exhibition is an important opportunity to tell the story of how Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) has the potential to help address the UK’s severe shortfall of social rent homes and Temporary Accommodation crisis. Drawing on the collaborative Social Rent Housing at Pace Playbook, we look forward to sharing innovative case studies from across the UK that show that between us, we have all the required elements to start building the homes we need at scale and pace.”

  • John Bonning, Building Centre 

    “The Building Centre is proud to showcase innovation and industrialisation in the built environment, and we are delighted to be working with Housing Festival. They are identifying the blocks in the UK housing sector and showing how to get over them. We want to turn up the volume and support the whole sector joining in to meet the challenge that could transform the lives of the many thousands of people in need of decent homes. This will bring benefits to the wellbeing of individuals and the economy of our country.”

  • Kate Farrell, Crisis

    “Crisis, along with many other organisations, are calling for 90,000 social rented homes a year to be built as we know this is what is needed to help sustainably prevent and end homelessness. We are pleased to be working with The Building Centre and the Housing Festival on the New Homes in New Ways exhibition to explore how Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) can play a role in supplementing traditional building methods and contribute to the step change in the supply of genuinely affordable homes that we are calling for. We are supportive of MMC to deliver good quality, well designed homes that meet the standards any of us would expect to live in and this is the test we ask others to use as well.”