Part of the Hale Village masterplan
At Hale Village in Tottenham, N17, United House, a BREE legacy company, delivered 388 residential units, completed in 2013. The homes formed part of the broader Lee Valley Estates masterplan, a major regeneration of around 1,210 homes that reshaped the Tottenham Hale area into a new urban district.
Within that wider masterplan, Newlon Housing Trust delivered 542 affordable homes separately and Bellway delivered around 497 private-sale homes. United House's 388 units represented a substantial part of the overall delivery and helped establish the new community at Hale Village.
A new eco-district for Tottenham
Hale Village was conceived as a sustainable urban village, with the masterplan led by BDP. The development was served by a biomass-fuelled energy centre that supplied low-carbon heat to the new homes, making it one of London's more ambitious district-energy schemes of its time.
The scale of the project made it one of the largest residential developments in London during its delivery, transforming a former industrial area next to Tottenham Hale station into a dense, mixed-tenure neighbourhood.
Delivering at this density on a former industrial site next to a major transport interchange required close coordination between the masterplan partners, each responsible for different blocks and tenures within a shared framework. The energy centre and shared infrastructure tied the separate elements into a single functioning district.
Anchoring Tottenham Hale regeneration
The homes delivered at Hale Village played a defining role in the regeneration of Tottenham Hale, bringing new residents and new infrastructure to an area undergoing significant change. The masterplan combined homes for sale, affordable housing and shared facilities within a single coordinated framework.
BREE Construction's legacy contribution of 388 units at Hale Village reflects the company's history of delivering at scale within complex, multi-partner regeneration programmes.
The arrival of so many new homes, together with the energy centre and shared facilities, helped catalyse the broader regeneration of Tottenham Hale and supported the area's emergence as a growth location within north London. United House's contribution sat at the centre of that transformation.




