Prefab houses are being hailed as the answer to Birmingham’s chronic housing shortage - offering cheap and quickly assembled properties to cut housing waiting lists.

But West Midlands mayoral candidate Beverley Nielsen has slammed Government proposals to bring back the hut-like buildings, famously used to tackle a post-war housing crisis 70 years ago.

Prefabs have largely disappeared from the streets of Britain but may be set for a revival with councils, including Chelmsford in Essex and Ealing in London, looking to import them.

In Birmingham just a handful of the lightweight bungalows remain, including in Wake Green Road Moseley where they are preserved and protected under a Grade II historic listing.

The Government is now offering incentives to councils and developers to build 100,000 prefabs by the end of the decade.

Beverley Nielsen

Local Government Secretary Sajid Javid has visited prefab construction sites in Germany, while manufacturers in China and Russia are also believed to be looking to the UK.

If elected West Midlands mayor in May, Lib Dem Beverley Nielsen says she will oppose their reintroduction in the region.

She said: “I am calling upon the government to abandon plans to ‘rescue’ the UK housing shortage with prefabricated, imported buildings, because it will ruin an industry, de-skill a generation before they get their careers started and will fail to provide homes that people want to live in.

“Central Government is ignoring the impact of its housing policies on the West Midlands. Full of false promises. The truth is these ‘cheap’ houses will double our costs - exporting jobs, skills and investment.

Modern prefab houses being built in North Shields
poll loading

Should we bring back prefabs to solve housing crisis?

“The West Midlands currently enjoys a return of £2.84 for every £1 invested in UK housing and that is because we make many construction materials in this region. That will change if the government insists we import prefabricated housing systems from places like Russia and China.

“People want masonry homes built to last 150 years not lightweight imports with a design life of 60 years.”

“It will also lose a golden opportunity to get generation of young people into a career in construction.”

She added: “Most politicians have little or no knowledge of the housing or construction industries and their meddling may well have many unintended consequences as we head for Brexit. This is one occasion where we should be putting local industry first.”

The Government will encourage lending for prefabs, or 21st century modular houses, to be built off site and put up quickly.

Post war prefabs in Wake Green Road, Moseley

The industry says that construction materials have improved and these are much longer lasting than their 1940s predecessors.

They will be aimed at young people who are trying to gain a foothold on the housing ladder.

Housing minister Gavin Barwell said: “Off-site construction could provide a huge opportunity to increase housing supply and we want to see more innovation like this emulated across the house-building sector.”