Key Points
- Southwark Council has awarded planning permission for a 152-home affordable housing scheme for key workers, developed in partnership with Bouygues UK.
- The site is at the junction of Abbey Street and Druid Street, near London Bridge and Bermondsey stations, close to Zone 1.
- The development will include a new community centre with a large flexible double-height space and smaller support rooms.
- Homes will be let under the Key Worker Living Rent product, available to households with combined annual incomes between £26,000 and £75,000.
- Eligible key workers include NHS staff, teachers, police officers, firefighters and social workers.
- The scheme is described as the first development project under Southwark Council’s emerging Affordable Housing Supplementary Planning Guidance.
- Construction is expected to begin around mid-2026, with completion targeted for 2029.
- The project supports the Mayor of London’s wider plan to deliver 6,000 rent-controlled key-worker homes by 2030, with Southwark’s 150–152-home pilot seen as an early example of that ambition.
- The community centre will be available for community events, activities and hire; the council will seek an independent operator to manage it nearer to opening.
- The development will provide short-let tenancies in perpetuity, rather than a shared ownership model, with rents capped at London Living Rent levels and pegged to one-third of local average incomes.
Southwark (South London News) January 2026 – Planning permission has been granted for a 152-home affordable housing scheme for key workers in Southwark, alongside a new community centre, under a partnership between Southwark Council and Bouygues UK.
- How will the Abbey Street–Druid Street key worker scheme work?
- What facilities will the development include for residents and the wider community?
- How does this scheme fit into Southwark and London’s wider key worker housing strategy?
- When will construction start andhomes become available?
- For local residents and the community
The development, at the junction of Abbey Street and Druid Street near London Bridge and Bermondsey stations, will provide homes for key workers including NHS staff, teachers, police officers, firefighters and social workers.
The homes will be let at Key Worker Living Rent to households with a combined annual income of between £26,000 and £75,000.
How will the Abbey Street–Druid Street key worker scheme work?
As reported by the Southwark Council news service, the project will deliver approximately 150–152 affordable homes for key workers, enabling them to live close to their workplace, reducing travel times and offering an improved work-life balance to those providing vital services for their community. The rent levels will be equivalent to London Living Rent levels, calculated by ward.
The housing will be available to key workers with a combined household annual salary of between £26,000 and £67,000 per year in earlier announcements, while the most recent planning permission notice specifies a range of £26,000 to £75,000.
All key worker homes will be short-let tenancies in perpetuity (as opposed to a shared ownership model), with tenancies offered on a rolling basis and rents capped at London Living Rent levels, pegged at one-third of local average incomes.
The site, next to the Arnold Estate near Zone 1, with close proximity to London Bridge and Bermondsey stations, will be the first development project under the council’s emerging Affordable Housing Supplementary Planning Guidance.
A development partner was procured via the Pagabo Framework to deliver the scheme, design, construct, and then manage the building and tenancies over a 40-year lease.
What facilities will the development include for residents and the wider community?
The development includes the delivery of a new community centre, with a large flexible double-height space and a number of smaller support spaces.
The centre will be available for all the community for a range of events, activities and for hire; and the council will be seeking an independent operator to manage the space nearer to the time of opening.
This community facility was a response to earlier conversations with the local community and a commitment from the council to replace the former Beormund Community Centre in Bermondsey, according to the council’s 2025 announcement on the pilot key worker housing model.
The new centre is intended to maintain and enhance local access to community space while the housing scheme is delivered.
How does this scheme fit into Southwark and London’s wider key worker housing strategy?
As reported by London Mayor Sadiq Khan’s office in January 2026, the Mayor plans to deliver 6,000 key-worker homes by 2030, with Southwark behind the vision and plans to deliver around 150 key-worker homes as a pilot project in Bermondsey in partnership with Bouygues UK.
The Southwark scheme is described as part of that broader push to deliver rent-controlled, affordable homes for London’s key workers.
Earlier Southwark announcements referred to around 100 homes at capped rents to be delivered with a development partner, with the council having committed to start 500 affordable homes for key workers by 2026.
The 152-home permission now represents a scaled-up version of that original pilot ambition and is positioned as the first project under the council’s emerging Affordable Housing Supplementary Planning Guidance.
According to Oliver Campbell, MD of Bouygues UK’s development arm, the company is
“thrilled to have been selected by Southwark Council as the development partner for this landmark scheme in SE1,”
noting their successful collaboration on several projects, including the Tustin Estate scheme where they are delivering nearly 700 new homes.
When will construction start andhomes become available?
Subject to planning, construction will start around mid-2026 on the new development, with completion targeted for 2029.
The scheme was expected to start on site in 2026 in earlier council communications, and the latest permission confirms that timeline.
The developer will draw from the council’s list of eligible tenants on a first-refusal basis, meaning that key workers already registered with Southwark’s housing options services will have priority access once the homes are ready.
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Background to the Abbey Street–Druid Street key worker development
The Abbey Street–Druid Street scheme builds on Southwark Council’s earlier key worker housing pilot, which identified a site at 177 Abbey Street and proposed around 100 affordable homes for keyworkers in Bermondsey.
The council originally set out to deliver around 100 new affordable homes in Bermondsey for keyworkers via a development agreement, with the site at 177 Abbey Street identified as the core location.
A development partner was procured to deliver the scheme in line with the council’s objectives, responsible for designing the scheme, construction, and then managing the building and tenancies over a 40-year lease.
The council’s original plan included replacing the former Beormund Community Centre in Bermondsey following conversations with the local community and a commitment from the council.
Bouygues UK was appointed as the development partner for the delivery of key worker homes in the borough in June 2025, with the project expected to deliver approximately 150 affordable homes for key workers including social workers, teachers, fire-fighters, police and NHS clinical staff. The site is described as next to the Arnold Estate near Zone 1, with close proximity to London Bridge and Bermondsey stations.
The project delivers on the council’s commitment to start 500 affordable homes for keyworkers by 2026 and is positioned as the first development project under the council’s emerging Affordable Housing Supplementary Planning Guidance.
Consultation events with the local community were held in June 2025 to discuss the development at 177 Abbey Street, with the council seeking feedback on the housing and community centre components.
How could this development affect key workers, tenants and local residents?
For NHS staff, teachers, police officers, firefighters and social workers working in or near Southwark, the scheme offers the chance to rent a home close to their workplace at rents capped at London Living Rent levels, calculated by ward.
With eligibility restricted to households with combined annual incomes between £26,000 and £75,000, the scheme targets middle-income key workers who may struggle to afford market rents in central London but are not eligible for the lowest social housing tiers.
The short-let tenancies in perpetuity mean that eligible tenants can move on when their circumstances change, with new key workers able to access the homes on a rolling basis, rather than the properties being sold or converted to shared ownership.
This model is designed to keep key workers in the borough over time, supporting the council’s aim to reduce travel times and improve work-life balance for staff providing vital services.
For local residents and the community
The inclusion of a new community centre with a large flexible double-height space and smaller support rooms is intended to provide additional community infrastructure, replacing the former Beormund Community Centre and offering space for events, activities and hire.
The council’s intention to seek an independent operator to manage the centre nearer to opening suggests that the facility could become a locally run hub, potentially supporting community groups, training, and social activities.
Residents in the Abbey Street–Druid Street area may experience increased construction activity from mid-2026 to 2029, as well as changes to the local housing mix as 152 new homes are added near London Bridge and Bermondsey stations.
The development’s proximity to Zone 1 and good public transport links means that the area could see further investment and regeneration over time, consistent with Southwark’s wider housing and economic development plans.
