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Nick Millican on the Real Drivers of Housing Insecurity

Housing insecurity is often discussed in terms of numbers—supply shortfalls, affordability indexes, planning permissions. But Nick Millican sees something deeper behind the data. As CEO of Greycoat Real Estate and a long-time observer of London’s property landscape, he believes the roots of the housing crisis are not just structural. They’re behavioral, financial, and policy-driven. And until those underlying currents are addressed, no amount of new construction will fully solve the problem.

Nick Millican is not a public sector advocate  nor does he position himself as a housing activist. His background is in commercial real estate, where strategy and return are tightly linked. Yet his work puts him in regular contact with the forces that shape the city’s housing realities—land availability, market incentives, institutional appetite, and regulatory intent. That proximity gives him a clear view of what’s working, what’s broken, and what might shift.

One of his core insights is that housing insecurity is no longer limited to the traditionally vulnerable. Increasingly, it affects working professionals, young families, and those whose incomes place them just above the threshold for public support but well below the level needed to secure stable, high-quality housing in London. This squeeze, Millican argues, has less to do with raw shortage and more to do with how the market is structured.

At the heart of the issue, he points to misalignment. Planning frameworks, financial products, and developer incentives often operate in silos. Local authorities may approve housing schemes that tick numerical boxes but fall short of long-term value. Institutional investors may favor projects that offer dependable yield but lack community integration. Developers may pursue density targets that underdeliver on quality or livability. Each actor is rational in isolation, but the system as a whole produces disconnection.

Millican believes this disconnection shows up in two key ways: tenure imbalance and income mismatch. For decades, homeownership was treated as the gold standard. But as affordability has declined, many Londoners now rent by necessity rather than choice. The rental market, in turn, has grown without the regulatory clarity or investment stability that could make it a reliable solution. Meanwhile, those who do attempt to buy often face barriers not because housing is unavailable, but because it’s inaccessible—financially, logistically, or psychologically.

He doesn’t argue that every problem has a market solution. But he does emphasize that better alignment between capital and community is possible. Institutional landlords, for example, can play a stabilizing role in the rental sector if their strategies prioritize long-term tenant retention over short-term churn. Developers can contribute by designing for a range of income levels, not just the top end of the market. And planning bodies can strengthen outcomes by rewarding design quality, public realm contribution, and connectivity—not just unit count.

Another point Nick Millican raises is the need for flexibility in how housing is conceptualized. Mixed-use environments that integrate residential, commercial, and communal functions have the potential to create greater economic resilience. When people can live close to where they work, access green space, and build local networks, housing becomes more than shelter. It becomes a platform for stability.

This focus on functionality over form also means rethinking how success is measured. Housing policy often focuses on delivery targets, but Millican suggests a broader lens. Are residents staying longer? Are neighborhoods gaining vitality? Are energy and transportation costs manageable? These questions point to the experience of housing, not just its availability.

He also acknowledges that some of the most effective interventions lie outside the property sector entirely. Wage stagnation, childcare costs, transport pricing—these shape housing insecurity as much as square footage. Real estate cannot solve what labor and infrastructure fail to support. But it can design with those pressures in mind.

At Greycoat, this thinking informs how the team evaluates urban regeneration and commercial developments. While the firm doesn’t develop housing directly, it regularly considers the housing implications of its projects. Office space, after all, draws workers. Public realm upgrades invite families. Neighborhood evolution creates both demand and tension. Being alert to these dynamics allows for more intentional contributions to the urban ecosystem.

Millican’s perspective is not built on policy proposals. It’s built on proximity—to deals, to planning tables, to market forces. That vantage point gives him clarity: housing insecurity won’t be solved by sentiment or slogans. It will be solved when stakeholders align their tools around shared purpose. That purpose isn’t just volume. It’s viability.

In a city defined by complexity, that alignment won’t come easily. But for Nick Millican, the path forward is not about choosing sides. It’s about refining systems, adjusting incentives, and designing for the full arc of how people live. Housing isn’t just an asset class. It’s the foundation for everything else a city wants to be.

Nick Millican has also recently discussed how his company is addressing the industry’s carbon footprint in an article for Green Prophet.