As pressure mounts to deliver new homes faster, more sustainably and at greater scale, English developers are looking beyond their traditional supply chains - and increasingly, they are finding answers north of the border.
Deeside Timberframe, one of Scotland’s longest-established timber frame manufacturers, has secured a series of major residential projects across England in recent months, marking a significant expansion of its footprint south of the border. Collectively, the developments represent more than 300 new homes across the North East and North West of England and a multi-million-pound pipeline of work, reflecting a growing confidence among English developers in proven offsite construction partners with the capacity to deliver at scale.
The schemes, awarded in parallel, span North Yorkshire, Cumbria and Sunderland and include a mix of houses and bungalows across sites ranging from 68 to more than 100 units. While geographically dispersed, the projects share a common theme: developers seeking delivery certainty at a time when programme risk, labour availability and sustainability requirements are reshaping procurement decisions across the housing sector.
Rather than signalling a tentative move into a new market, Deeside Timberframe’s recent English wins point to a more fundamental shift. As Modern Methods of Construction mature, developers are moving away from experimental approaches and instead prioritising experienced partners with established manufacturing processes, technical depth and a demonstrable track record.
Derek Wann, Business Development Director at Deeside Timberframe, says the demand the company is seeing in England mirrors changes that took place earlier in Scotland.
“Developers are under more pressure than ever to deliver homes quickly, efficiently and to a consistent standard,” he says. “What we’re seeing now is a clear preference for timber frame partners who already understand how to deliver at scale. These are live residential developments where programme certainty underpins every commercial decision.”
The scale of Deeside’s recent English appointments reinforces that point. The projects include complex residential schemes incorporating infrastructure works such as highways, landscaping and sustainable drainage, requiring close coordination between design, manufacture and site delivery.
“These are substantial developments with real programme and commercial pressures,” Wann adds. “The fact that developers are awarding multiple schemes in parallel says a great deal about where confidence now sits in the market.”
For English developers, timber frame is increasingly viewed not just as a sustainability choice, but as a practical route to reducing risk and improving build performance. Offsite manufacture allows greater control over quality and sequencing, while helping to mitigate labour constraints that continue to affect traditional build routes.
Graeme Guy, National Sales Manager at Deeside Timberframe, believes this shift is changing how developers engage with timber frame specialists.
“We’re being brought into conversations much earlier than before,” he says. “Developers want partners who can support them strategically, not just supply panels. They’re looking for manufacturing capability, technical assurance and the confidence that delivery can be maintained across multiple sites.”
He adds that Deeside’s expansion into England has been driven by demand rather than geography.
“This isn’t about chasing work in new regions,” Graeme says. “It’s about responding to where housing delivery is accelerating and where developers are actively seeking established timber frame partners who can help them scale.”
As England continues to grapple with ambitious housing targets and a tightening construction landscape, the appeal of experienced offsite manufacturers is only set to grow. For Deeside Timberframe, the recent run of English project wins reflects a market that is becoming more discerning — and more confident — about where timber frame fits in the future of housing delivery.
Headquartered in Scotland, with manufacturing facilities in Throsk and Stonehaven, Deeside Timberframe also operates an office in Warrington to support its growing client base across North West England.