Homeless hostel to become residential housing

A former homeless hostel will be brought back into "full residential use", Hull City Council has confirmed.
William Booth House was bought by the authority for £1 in February last year after it was decommissioned by the Salvation Army in April 2023.
The council said it was preparing a grant funding application to Homes England to create affordable housing and hoped to start the project early next year.
A spokesperson for the authority said the proposal would "help address Hull's housing needs".

The building, on Hessle Road, was previously used to provide supported accommodation for people suffering homelessness and trauma but has remained mostly empty since the charity stopped running it.
The site is currently surrounded by fencing, with overgrown grass and the windows covered with metal sheeting. Construction work on the A63 Castle Street project is taking place a short distance away.
The council said it hoped to submit funding applications to a number of organisations "over the course of the coming months".

A spokesperson said: "We are preparing to submit a grant funding application to bring the building back into full residential use, which will help address Hull's housing needs.
"Without such grants it is not often possible to bring affordable housing development forward."
The authority also said the current rough sleeping provision is a "temporary solution while the site is not in full use" and it would be working with external agencies when the provision is decommissioned.
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