Images: WECH

WECH calls on young residents to safeguard community ownership

The pioneering community-owned housing association seeks to inspire and empower the next generation as it celebrates its 40th anniversary

GOVERNANCE

Jonathan Rosenberg

Jonathan Rosenberg


Founder, WECH

Jonathan Rosenberg

Jonathan Rosenberg


Founder, WECH

Issue 79 | September 2025

Walterton and Elgin Community Homes (WECH) is a housing association (Registered Provider) which took ownership of the Walterton and Elgin Estates in North Paddington, City of Westminster, in 1992 after a seven-year campaign to prevent council homes being sold for redevelopment.

The Tenants’ Choice provisions in the 1988 Housing Act – designed to privatise council housing, and which were repealed in 1996 – allowed WECH to forcibly acquire its estates, creating a constitutional model that is rare within England’s social housing sector.

WECH’s founders wish to share their story in the context of a growing community ownership movement and its potential to address social inequality. Our WECH@40 project celebrates the start of our campaign in 1985 and aims to research, preserve and disseminate campaign assets and stories, engage younger residents in valuing and sustaining their democratic privileges, and share learning with policy makers.

What is WECH?

WECH is a large-scale, democratic, community-owned housing association: its history needs to be contextualised, preserved and re-interpreted to enable WECH’s population to protect its democratic ownership, and to inform national discourse.

According to the Office for National Statistics, of the 7,264 Middle Layer Super Output Areas in England & Wales, WECH is in the most densely populated of all – and it is in the 20% most deprived. Yet WECH’s peers are to be found in the least populated, most remote and most rural community-owned estates in Scotland, and in the proliferation of Community Land Trusts in England and Wales.

WECH owns and manages 675 homes, turning over around £5 million a year, providing affordable, high-quality housing for 1,500 people, running a community centre, which hosts 40 services such as food and clothes banks, debt and welfare advice, and activities such as for health and wellbeing.

Over the past 40 years, surrounding housing associations have merged with larger entities: Paddington Churches is now Notting Hill Genesis, Brent People’s is Sovereign Network Group, and Octavia is Abri.

homes owned and managed by WECH

turnover per year

people live in WECH homes

Walterton Estate Victorian houses in the mid-1980s

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Walterton Estate Victorian houses in the mid-1980s

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Residents establish WECH in 1988 and in 1989 apply to take community ownership of the estates

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72% of residents vote for WECH to take over ownership of their homes for the community

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Refurbishment work begins in 1992

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The first Victorian house refurbishment is completed in July 1993

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Governance and determination

WECH’s governance, which arises from the Community-Based Housing Association model rules, is a democratic, locally based Community Land Trust. Residents, who are WECH members (from over 75% of households), elect the board, which determines policy, and appoints experts and the chief executive.

WECH’s campaign to defend its homes, and to take ownership and control, attracted national media coverage and political attention, and is much referenced in academic studies and texts. In the 1990s, the District Auditor’s investigations into the gerrymandering ‘Homes for Votes’ scandal uncovered documents about Walterton and Elgin which forced Westminster City Council to commission an external investigator. He reported that the council had conducted what he called a ‘war’ against the WECH community to block it from taking ownership of the homes.

The council’s ‘dirty tricks’ included attempts, which were unconventional (at least for a local authority), to dissuade the then Housing Corporation Registrar, James Tickell, from registering WECH as a housing association. This dirty trick was not the only one which failed.

The council’s investigator then produced a 650-page examination of the council’s decision, in furtherance of that ‘war’ against WECH, to house 100 homeless families into the most asbestos-ridden tower blocks in the country. He concluded that, not only was it unlawful, but it was the worst decision ever taken in the history of local government – one which WECH reversed in 1990 by getting the Daily Mirror’s then political editor, Alastair Campbell, to expose on its front page.

Elgin Estate's twin 22-storey tower blocks built in the 1960s. WECH removed asbestos and demolished the blocks in favour of low-rise alternatives in 1994.

Next 40 years

To sustain WECH for the next 40 years, its younger residents must claim their history and guard their democratic privileges by getting involved with governance and initiating community services. Bringing together WECH’s archive and stories for future generations will empower them with the knowledge and tools to shape WECH’s future.

WECH@40 reveals how an asset-empowered, democratically accountable community has delivered transformative change in an otherwise disadvantaged neighbourhood: at its heart, this project is about amplifying tenants’ voices, promoting community ownership and championing democracy.

Anyone who wishes to get involved with WECH@40, or who has suggestions for raising funds to support this project, please click here to email Jonathan Rosenberg.
“To sustain WECH for the next 40 years, its younger residents must claim their history and guard their democratic privileges by getting involved with governance and initiating community services.”

To discuss this article, click here to email Annie Field or Jon Slade

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To discuss this article, click here to email Greg Campbell

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