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Protestors occupy ex-Camelot headquarters

A former headquarters of a property management company that rents empty buildings to tenants who act as guardians to prevent them from being squatted has itself been occupied by protesters.

The upmarket building in Shoreditch, east London, was used by Camelot Europe and has been targeted by activists who say the property guardians are not getting a good deal and do not have full tenancy rights.
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Bewoonster anti-kraakpand: ‘Mijn woning was levensgevaarlijk’

‘Die vrouw in Boxtel die stierf door elektrocutie? Dat had ik kunnen zijn…’

Aan de telefoon hebben we een tipgever die reageert op ons onderzoek naar het gat op de woningmarkt. Zij is één van die huurders die langdurig op de wachtlijst staan voor een sociale huurwoning, of letterlijk tussen wal en schip vallen: te rijk voor een sociale huurwoning, maar niet rijk genoeg voor een vrije sector woning of koophuis. De ‘Net Niet-Generatie’, zoals ze in de sector ook wel worden genoemd.
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City, property firm “negligent” in shower electrocution of Janneke van Gaal

From nltimes, a very sad story:

The municipality of Boxtel, an anti-squat property management firm and a maintenance firm were all found “significantly negligent” in the wrongful death of Janneke van Gaal, who was electrocuted while taking a shower in her home, the Oost-Brabant Court ruled on Friday. Mitigating the poor condition of the building and hiring a qualified electrician to fix existing problems would have prevented the 20-year-old’s death, the court said.
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‘Ik vond Janneke dood onder de douche. Ze was geëlektrocuteerd’

Akash (24) vond zijn huisgenoot Janneke van Gaal (20) dood onder de douche. “Ik hoorde een harde schreeuw. Toen ik naar de badkamer rende, was haar lichaam al koud. ”

Had voorkomen kunnen worden dat Janneke van Gaal door elektrocutie om het leven kwam? Dat is de vraag waar de rechtbank Den Bosch zich vandaag en morgen over buigt.
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150.000 euro boete geëist in zaak elektrocutie Janneke van Gaal (20) in Boxtel

Omroep Brabant:

DEN BOSCH – Het Openbaar Ministerie eist een boete van 60.000 euro van de gemeente Boxtel en verhuurder Camelot voor de dood van studente Janneke van Gaal in 2013. De technische dienst van Camelot moet daarbij nog eens een boete van 30.000 euro betalen als het aan justitie ligt.

Het OM vindt verhuurder Camelot en de gemeente Boxtel allebei verantwoordelijk voor de dood Janneke van Gaal, maar kan voor nalatigheid geen cel- of werkstraf eisen.
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The downside of being a property guardian

From BBC news:

A new sitcom centres on six young people living as property guardians in an abandoned hospital. The UK’s housing crisis has driven people to unusual solutions and some think they’re being exploited, writes Eleanor Ross.

The rocketing cost of rent in some parts of the UK is squeezing tenants so hard that property guardianship, or “legal squatting” as it has been dubbed, is the only way some can afford a roof over their heads.

Guardians pay to take “licence” of a room or space within a vacant building for less money than a private rental agreement – earning the owner of the building cash and keeping genuine squatters away. The practice now forms the backdrop to a Channel 4 sitcom, Crashing.

But low rents and a central location come with a catch.
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More Scots becoming property guardians to save on costs

The pernicious problem of antisquat moves north – invading Scotland. From the Herald:

Increasing numbers of Scots are taking the plunge living in disused commercial premises or empty houses as they seek cheaper rents and the chance to live in unusual buildings such as disused former childrens’ care homes.

Property guardianship – where renters provide security for owners by living in empty buildings in return for low rents – is said to have ballooned north of the Border over the past year.

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The high price of cheap living: how the property guardianship dream soured

From the Guardian:
In disbelief, Charlie Hope reread the email. “It said I had 24 hours to pack my stuff and get out,” he says. He felt confident that evicting anyone at such short notice must be illegal, although his evictors were threatening to call the police for assistance if he didn’t leave.

Hope’s neighbour had already tearfully packed down her bedroom and left after receiving a similar email the day before. She would be trespassing if she stayed on the premises, she was warned, and so, frightened and distressed, she took a taxi to her parents’ house.

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Central London properties, minus the sky-high rents. But what’s the catch?

“Not many people can afford to live in a 10,000 square foot property in the heart of London like Robin – but actually, she can’t afford to either, which is why she became a property guardian.”
So began a recent Sky News report on property guardians, the latest in a series of upbeat features on the practice of recruiting people to live in empty commercial or residential buildings for a fee. There are agencies that exist entirely to find and vet potential occupants; now photo-heavy features regularly appear in papers and magazines, showing guardians living the high life in rural mansions and Kensington apartments. But is everything quite as bright as it looks?

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De Kabath

De Kabath is Dutch anti-squat. On their website, they’ve got a FAQ, which includes the answer – “Sitting outside, no problem”. Apparently pseudo-renters have been asking if they can sit outside of the property they pay good money to not rent. And the answer is YES they may! How kind of de Kabath. (more…)


Buiten zitten, geen probleem

Pfffff – serieus?

In de zomer is het heerlijk om buiten te zitten. Vooral als je de beschikking hebt over een eigen tuin of terras. Er is een aantal afspraken om rekening mee te houden als je buiten zit. We hebben ze hieronder even voor je op een rij gezet.
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Moving London: When Living Becomes A Job – Anti-squatting and Property Guardians

When we decided to move to London the first question that came to my mind was: Would it be possible to find an affordable and reasonable accommodation in London? Some of my friends living in London have struggled to find something acceptable and I was sure that it would be difficult for us. Another friend told us about new form of housing which is more flexible and cheap. That’s the way we found out about the existence of the so called property guardians.
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I can’t even afford to be a property guardian

As a 23-year-old, the housing market in London can feel like an impenetrable fortress. Confronted with sky-high rents, it quickly becomes a hostile and daunting place. And in a city where garden sheds are sold as de facto homes for £70,000 and hundreds queue to view matchbox rooms, one naturally becomes desperate.
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Beware Camelot

I was once a tenant for Camelot and they said there was no extra charge for council tax and that the rent was all inclusive. When they told me it was time to leave, they took the council tax out of my deposit and would then not answer my calls or even talk to me about it. I asked Citizens Advice to talk to them on my behalf but they ignored us. I considered the small claims court but life got in the way. Can be good but beware of hidden extras and make sure you get your copy of the contract and don’t accept promises of ‘it’s in the post’. Be warned and get it there and then as they are very hit and miss.

poor management

I’m afraid you’ll find a great many guardian agencies operate the same way. I too used to live with Ad Hoc 5 years ago.. since then I’ve also lived with Camelot, Newbould and just moved in with VPS. I have friends who have lived with Live-In Guardians, Oaksure and Global Guardians. With the exception of Oaksure, the rest have all proved very similar in terms of very poor management, with finance departments all in shambles.

Guardians are frequently not paid back their full deposits in a timely manner, agents don’t respond to emails regarding maintenance or other concerns, some proudly evict guardians with less than 28 days notice which is in violation of UK law… a fact which many agencies themselves seem to be ignorant of.

If anyone reading this has been a guardian and wants to share their story, please feel free to get in touch via a new Facebook discussion group we started up. https://www.facebook.com/propertyguardianslondon


Anti-squat: squatting in the age of neoliberalism?

This article was written for the course “The Political Sociology of the City”Source

Introduction

“‘Protectionby occupation’ – what could this possibly mean? Well the nexttime you walk past what might look like a vacant building; takeanother look it might not be as empty as it seems. People are in needof affordable housing and property owners need to deter vandals andsquatters. Property Guardianship is the answer more and more peopleare turning to.”

Camelot news release (Camelot , 2014b)

When I moved to Amsterdam finding a home was a nightmare. Housing is one of the major problems that people arriving to the Netherlands have to face. Tenure is dominated by owner occupied houses and specially by housing associations, based on a system of overcrowded waiting lists. The average waiting time for an apartment in Amsterdam has risen to eleven years (Van Zoelen, 2012). Together, owner occupied and housing associations account for 75% of the total amount of houses. And this will increase since in 2020 the municipality estimates that only 15% will be private rent (Municipality of Amsterdam and Woonbarometer as cited in Van Gent, 2012). But the last five years another option has been growing. It does not appear in statistics yet, but it hosts tens of thousands of people. In Dutch is known as antikraak (“anti-squat”), but in the UK it is known as property guardians (PG). The mechanism is simple: empty buildings -that their owners do not want to or can not rent, sell, renovate or demolish- are set as temporary housing. “A win-win solution: […] secures and maintains property whilst providing affordable, temporary accommodation” (Camelot, 2014b). But this story is not as simple, and not free of controversy at all.

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Property guardians: a solution to the UK’s housing crisis?

The UK is in the midst of a housing crisis. Average private rents have soared to at least 40% of income in London, social housing tenants are being decanted out of their homes and communities to make way for profit-driven redevelopments and 22,000 homes sit empty in London alone.

Given the depth of the crisis, it’s unsurprising that property guardianships are booming. Guardians pay a licence fee to occupy part of a building, to secure it and prevent damage. Most buildings are not housing, and the guardian is not a tenant, meaning they have few legal rights.

 

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A silent shift?

Abstract:
The traditional Dutch rental contract is permanent (i.e. time unlimited), but there are indications that in recent years the number of temporary rental contracts has increased considerably. Dutch housing policy appears to be responding to this by pursuing deregulation of the conditions under which temporary rent is permitted. It is in this regard startling that there is no reliable data available about the size or character of the temporary sector, and it has thus far not attracted any scholarly attention. Given that temporary rent can be viewed as a form of precarisation, a transfer of risk to citizens, with corresponding negative effects on the lives of those involved, it is imperative to close this knowledge gap. This paper is a first attempt to do this. Firstly, I systematically review the scarce evidence that is currently available, and secondly, I explore why the rise of temporary rent has thus far failed to stimulate any social debate; it appears to constitute a silent precarisation that contrasts with the politically sensitive issue of labour precarisation. In doing so, I will identify the research questions that must be answered if the significance of this process for both tenants and wider welfare-state restructuring is to be fully understood.

Source


Joke

I lived in a camelot for a year, and moved out a month ago to live in a normal flat.

Camelot are so hugely disorganised as a company. To the point where it’s almost funny, just because they honestly can’t get even the simplest of tasks right. I’m still getting emails saying I owe them the rent for this month, even though they know we’ve moved out.

They gave the keys to our room to the new guardians 3 days before we moved out, without realising that we still lived there. Even though they knew that we still lived there, as obviously it was in our contract. However, it turned out that the keys that they gave the new guardians were actually completely the wrong set of keys for our room, because, once again, they can’t do anything right at all.

It can actually be a decent experience living in a Camelot, but seriously, the company is a joke.


Comment

Rex D. 2015-02-13 06:09:26 +0000
I’m a property guardian & while I love breathing new life into disused buildings, greedy private companies who invest very little are now screwing us to the wall on our monthly license fees. In some cases they’re prices are approaching private rents & we have no tenants rights! I don’t know why councils don’t bring in their own guardian scheme. I support pop-up tenancies! If you want to discuss Guardianship I’ve started a Facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/propertyguardianslondon

Their whole company is a joke

I have been a property guardian at an Ad Hoc property in the Midlands, and yes the cost to live there is low, but the complete lack of communication from any employees of Ad Hoc, plus their complete disregard for the wellbeing of those living in their premises is disgusting.

After having moved in, about a week later it was decided by Ad Hoc that the lock on the door was insufficient. So they changed the lock. Baring in mind three persons lived at the property, they decided to get three keys cut. However they also decided that they needed to retain a key. As I was out on the day the lock was changed, I missed out on getting a key. I spent a week of having to contact the other residents and find out when they were in so I could get in, and was even locked out overnight, as they sent the wrong key to me and stated categorically in no way was I allowed to get an extra key cut!

Another resident had her car broken into, one had his bike damaged, and we even had a break in downstairs – all after they had come in and switched off the CCTV that was previously recording – I mean what’s the point in having us in there as security if you’re going to switch off the CCTV?!

When it came to moving out, I ended up having to stay a day extra because they changed the locks before I could get all of my items out (before our last day on our contract!) and when trying to contact them regarding this, I could not get hold of any persons on the numbers I had, resorting to leaving a message (!) on the emergency contact number. It was a complete joke.

I’m still waiting for my deposit to be returned. I will be making A LOT of noise if it’s not the full deposit, as at no point have I been informed that there would be any reduction. However, at no point have I been informed anything. My emails are always unanswered. Three times they’ve asked for my bank details to pay it back, but I have not received the deposit returned as yet.

Their whole company is a joke. Run properly, and it could be incredibly beneficial to lower income persons, and be a social enterprise champion. Sadly, it appears that their employees are unqualified to be doing any type of work, let alone customer-facing, their finance department is a shambles, and the whole company is a complete joke.

http://thickcreamydischarge.blogspot.nl/2010/11/ad-hoc-property-guardians-and-my.html


Need law advice

Hello everyone,

This story is a bit complicated, so please bear with me:

in May we moved into a huge property with several kitchens and bathrooms in Zone 1. The property was managed by the agency for almost 2 years and 40 people lived in it at the same time (!). Despite only having one room together we were both asked to pay a administration fee and a deposit. (more…)


Paying to Squat in London’s Derelict Buildings

The pub where Charlie Fegan lived before his days as a property guardian. Photo by Nicholas Pomeroy

“There were hypodermic needles in the fireplace and on the carpets, rats in the basement, the walls were pushed through, and copper piping had been ripped out so it leaked whenever it rained.”

Charlie Fegan, a 24-year-old graduate of the University of London, is describing life on the fringes of London’s housing crisis. For the last two years he’s been living as a “property guardian,” paying for the privilege of sleeping in the city’s empty buildings, where he essentially works as a security guard.

As rents in the UK capital soar, more and more people are turning to property guardianship as an answer to their individual housing crises. In the last four years the number of agencies in the country has increased by between 40 and 50 percent, with big multinational firms like Camelot and Ad Hoc and smaller “social” businesses like Dot Dot Dot all getting in on the action.

On the face of it, it seems like a good idea. Guardian agencies approach landlords with empty buildings and offer to fill them with people. Because it’s temporary, lasting until a long-term use is found for the building, the guardians pay cheap rents. And because the agencies get money from the guardians, they can offer a cheap service to the landlord. It’s sold as a win-win-win scenario. Cheap rent for the tenants, more or less free security for the landlords, and money for the agencies for doing very little.

But there’s a catch. The guardians are not in fact tenants, they are “licensees” who sign contracts to occupy buildings without any of the legal rights a regular tenant is entitled to. The result is a group of companies that, some guardians say, ban visitors, enter properties without warning, levy fines for minor violations, arbitrarily confiscate deposits, and dish out evictions on ridiculously short notice.

“Being a guardian means living in a constant state of anxiety,” Charlie tells me from a large three-story office he’s living in, a stone’s throw from Tower Bridge. “You have no rights at all. You’re essentially paying to be a squatter.”

A plaque marking the time Her Majesty opened the building hangs on the wall at the entrance to Charlie’s current home. It’s hard to imagine she was ever here. Lights flicker on and off over vast unfurnished rooms. A makeshift kitchen with two ovens and a single washing machine has been set up in the basement for 23 residents to use.

But compared to what Charlie is used to, this is luxury. Before moving to Tower Bridge he was living in an old pub in Dalston that had been run down by squatters before the landlord hired a company called Live-in Guardians, the brainchild of former lawyer Arthur Duke, to look after the building. It’s not uncommon to hear guardians complain about the condition of the places they are put in, but this place was apparently beyond the pale.

“I was desperate and glad to have a roof over my head, but I can’t describe how bad it was,” Charlie says. “We had no gas and none of the overhead lights worked. In my bedroom there was a hole through the window. The property owners were redeveloping the building into multistory flats and were doing ground testing while we lived there. Builders were there from nine to five with huge jackhammers. It was like living in a mine. All day long the house would shake.”

Photo courtesy of Charlie

Live-in Guardians insist every property is looked over and made habitable before guardians move in. But according to Charlie, the building was “extremely unsafe.”

“One day I arrived at the pub after a call from my house mate Rowan to find the power had gone off,” Charlie says. “When I went down into the basement there was thick smoke and all the electrics were on fire. There were no smoke alarms in the building and the fire brigade said that if we were upstairs sleeping they’d be pulling out dead bodies. These guys are evil and the schemes they offer are a ticking time bomb. It’s not long until somebody is hurt or gets killed.”

In the contracts most guardians sign, they are told they will have two weeks to pack up and prepare and leave when the landlord takes back possession of the building. But Charlie claims that a few months after the Tower Bridge property was opened, Live-in Guardians asked everyone inside to leave with just 48 hours notice.

“Last Friday we were told we had two days to get out,” Charlie says, visibly exhausted. “The emotional and psychological impact of feeling so precarious is unbearable. It’s draining, constantly looking out the window, waiting to be evicted.”

Photo by the author

When I contacted Arthur Duke, the CEO of Live-in Guardians, I was offered a very different version of events to the one Charlie described. I was told an electrician had rewired the pub and certified it as safe before the guardians moved in, but a small electrical fire had broken out after a storm that caused flood. A wireless radio–linked smoke alarm, Duke said, had alerted the guardians to the problem.

“The safety of our guardians is paramount and we take the matter very seriously,” Duke said. “We have a property inspector who has 30 years’ experience in the London Fire Brigade who undertakes surprise inspections at all our properties.”

Charlie and all his housemates’ dispute this account—they say there was no fire alarm or storm, just a squalid building offered to “desperate” guardians.

Inside a guarded property. Photo by the author

Whatever way you look at it, Charlie’s experience is a stark contrast to the way property guardianship is usually presented in the media as some kind of bourgeois lifestyle decision; an adventure for those with an appetite for urban shabbiness. In the companies’ promotional material, rather than shots of decaying pubs and dilapidated office blocks occupied by poor people, you get a slideshow of kooky locations, exposed brick and fixed-gear bikes, as if living in a guardian scheme is like going to an artisanal coffee shop. But Charlie’s story is by no means unique.

Holly Cozens, a 31-year-old from Brighton was living in an old convent run by Camelot—the largest guardian agency in the market—to save up money to rent on the private market.

“From my experience and from the other people that lived there, the fundamental problem was that they never give their deposits back to anyone,” she told me over the phone. “The other problem was that they can chuck you out for anything. Somebody I knew had an ashtray in the house. They hadn’t smoked inside but they kept the ashtray in their room. When Camelot saw it they asked him to leave. There was no chance to talk to them or discuss anything, you just had to go. Nor would they fix any of the things that would break. When one of the showers stopped working, we had 20 people all using the same one. Everybody would be emailing them but it would take them ages to get back.”

Mike Goldsmith, Camelot’s COO, denies the company confiscates deposits arbitrarily. “Unless there is a legitimate reason to make a deduction Camelot will always repay guardian deposits,” he told me. “We are also in the process of putting together an SLA [Service-Level Agreement] which will give targeted times to react to issues such as broken showers.”

A “ghost mansion” in London. Photo by Simon Childs

Another issue is that nobody seems to be sure whether core aspects of property guardianship are even legal. Guardian agencies remain convinced that by distinguishing between tenants and licensees they are doing nothing wrong. But a deeper look at the law suggests the distinction doesn’t get them as far as they think.

Take the issue of eviction. A guardian may not be a tenant, but they still qualify as a “residential occupier,” which means the 1977 t still applies. Almost all the guardians I spoke to had been thrown out with two weeks warning or less (although some agencies, like Camelot, have changed their policies and now offer their guardians more time to leave). Giles Peaker, a housing lawyer at Anthony Gold Solicitors, told me, “That means that in order to get somebody out there has to be, firstly, 28 days notice. And secondly, if the person does not go, the only way they can be got out is by a court order.” Those two-week notice periods are therefore on shaky legal ground, and if a guardian were to contest it, their agencies would have to take them to court to get them out of a property.

The guardian agencies are unsurprisingly keen to keep this quiet. If landlords had to wait a whole month to get their property back, would they bother with a guardian scheme in the first place?

These companies like to present themselves as offering creative solutions to the housing crisis—bringing empty buildings back into use as homes at rents people can actually afford. And people tend to agree with them. Last year Camelot even sponsored an Empty Homes conference put on by Shelter, the housing and homelessness charity.

But there’s something ironic about guardian services selling themselves as anti-squatting services. Squatting is a common response to homelessness, but guardian agencies’ livelihoods depend on convincing landlords and councils that squatting is bad. On their websites, squatters are portrayed as a threat while guardians are stylized as “key workers” and “creatives” happy to pay their way. The reality, of course, is that they are talking about the same group: people who cannot afford decent housing because wages are too low and rent is too high.

So businesses and landlords are outsourcing anti-squatting services to people who might otherwise have been squatters. “I’m completely ideologically opposed to guardianship but I had no other option that I could afford,” says Charlie. “I had just graduated and was trying to find a job. It was dark, though—the people who had lived there before, where are they now?”

Robin Hood Gardens. Photo by the author

And it’s not always derelict pubs or empty office blocks that guardians are asked to occupy. Often they end up in public housing that has been cleared and is awaiting demolition, to be replaced by luxury apartments for the well-off. Guardians become a physical part of the same process that makes it harder for them afford a proper home in the first place: gentrification.

This is the position that a 42-year-old council worker who we’ll call “James” finds himself in. He’s living as a guardian with agency Dot Dot Dot at Robin Hood Gardens, a brutalist council estate that’s soon to be pulled down. James told me, “I’m very aware of who we are and what this represents. But gentrification will happen whether we live here or not. I think we’ve integrated into the community as much as possible; there’s been no animosity toward us.”

Nevertheless, while there are plenty of reasons to criticize guardian schemes, a lot of people continue to find them attractive, or at least necessary. “I think this is one of many solutions to the housing crisis,” a friend of mine living as a guardian told me from a run-down office above a parking lot in Camden. “It’s not a long-term solution. But it allows people who are trapped in a life of paying rent, who will struggle to ever earn enough money to afford a house. And with that comes risk. If I come back from a holiday and find my stuff on the porch, then that’s the risk I’m taking.”

This seems to be an example of the nose-diving aspirations of today’s graduates, who often don’t see a future beyond unpaid internships and sleeping in old fire stations and closed infirmaries, locked in a long struggle for financial independence. No genuine solution to the housing crisis would look like this. But as long as London remains a place where finding a home is impossible for many, guardian schemes will continue to serve a purpose.

Follow Philip Kleinfeld on Twitter


Planning requirements

Planning requirements
  • #12
  • 23rd Oct 14, 7:31 AM
Just a note to all those looking into being Guardians of properties. If you are paying to live there even if it is a reduced rate.
Make sure the landlord/owner has planning permission.
If not you may find yourself in a situation of being visited by council Enforcement officers and then homeless.
I work in planning and this has come up a couple of times. With i am sure upsetting results for the Guardians.
http://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/showthread.php?t=4158599