Accessible Housing Matters UK

Ruth Hunter

If you care about homes that work for everyone, this podcast is for you. Each episode of Accessible Housing Matters UK dives into real conversations with the people shaping the future of inclusive living — from developers and designers to policy makers and everyday people with lived experience. You’ll discover inspiring stories, innovative solutions, and practical insights that prove accessibility doesn’t mean compromise — it means better design for all. Whether you’re a property professional, architect, landlord, or someone passionate about equality and independence, you’ll come away informed, motivated, and empowered to be part of the change. Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.co.uk 📩 Email me directly at ruth@veredusproperty.co.uk 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunterproperty Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living! N.B - Huge thank you to Stephen Beard of Accessible Housing Matters USA for allowing me to share the title for the UK version of the podcast.

  1. Building Accessible Homes from the Start, with Luis Canto E Castro

    May 29

    Building Accessible Homes from the Start, with Luis Canto E Castro

    Season 2 Ep 4 Summary Ruth Hunter is joined by disability inclusion and accessibility consultant Luis Canto E Castro for a powerful and deeply personal conversation about the reality of inaccessible housing in the UK. Living with spinal muscular atrophy, Luis shares firsthand experience of navigating unsuitable homes, inaccessible bathrooms, restrictive care policies, and the challenges of trying to access support through the Disabled Facilities Grant (DFG) system after moving to the UK from South Africa. Together, Ruth and Luis explore why retrofitting homes is often far more expensive and traumatic than building accessible homes from the start, why current housing standards still fail many disabled people, and how outdated policies continue to leave thousands trapped in unsuitable housing. They also discuss societal attitudes towards disability, the importance of lived experience in decision-making, and why accessible housing should be viewed as essential infrastructure, not an optional extra. Chapters 00:00 — Welcome + introduction to Luis Canto E Castro 01:00 — Luis’ lived experience with spinal muscular atrophy 02:58 — Moving to the UK and working in accessibility and inclusion 04:35 — The Inside Housing article and the need for accessible homes from the start 06:01 — Why current accessibility standards still fail disabled people 07:53 — Unsafe housing, inaccessible thresholds, and losing independence 11:23 — Trying to navigate the DFG system and online discrimination 14:34 — The government’s £50 million DFG funding announcement 17:38 — Why accessible homes should be designed for lifetime living 19:44 — Developers, “value engineering,” and accessibility being removed from schemes 22:18 — Why most people still don’t understand the accessible housing crisis 23:16 — Representation, politics, and the lack of disabled voices in decision-making 29:27 — Disability awareness, schools, and societal change 31:13 — Luis’ personal experience applying for a Disabled Facilities Grant 35:18 — Being refused DFG funding despite needing adaptations 38:38 — Self-funding home adaptations and creating independence 42:00 — Leaving agency care and taking control through direct payments 45:33 — What needs to change in the DFG system 47:23 — Why the UK must rethink accessible housing policy 48:18 — Where to find Luis and connect online Keywords Accessible housing, universal design, disability inclusion, spinal muscular atrophy, Disabled Facilities Grant, DFG, accessible homes, wheelchair users, M4(2), M4(3), housing policy, inclusive housing, disability advocacy, accessible bathrooms, adaptations, retrofitting homes, housing crisis, disability discrimination, accessible design, independent living, planning policy, social care, universal housing, ageing in place, lifetime homes, inclusive environments, disability awareness Contact details Luis Canto E Castro LinkedIn: Luis Canto E Castro Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.com 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.com 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter

    48 min
  2. The Hidden Crisis: Life After Injury in an Inaccessible System

    Apr 15

    The Hidden Crisis: Life After Injury in an Inaccessible System

    Season 2 Ep 3 Summary Ruth Hunter is joined by Glyn Hayes, accessible housing advocate and Public Affairs Coordinator at the Spinal Injuries Association. After sustaining a spinal cord injury in 2017, Glyn experienced firsthand just how inaccessible the UK housing system can be, from losing his home and job to being placed in unsuitable temporary accommodation. With lived experience, a background in local government, and deep insight into planning policy, he now campaigns for better provision of wheelchair accessible homes across the UK. Together, Ruth and Glyn explore the reality of navigating housing after life-changing injury, the lack of accessible rental stock, why local councillors have more power than most people realise, and how housing policy continues to fail disabled people. They also unpack the urgent need for more M4(3) wheelchair accessible homes, why the National Planning Policy Framework matters, and how accessible housing is not just a social issue but an economic one too. Chapters 00:00 — Welcome + introduction to Glyn Hayes 01:18 — Glyn’s injury, losing his home, and navigating unsuitable housing 04:36 — Why local councillors can be key in housing cases 10:13 — Leaving hospital, losing work, and trying to rebuild life 17:03 — From lived experience to advocacy and policy work 25:22 — Why the National Planning Policy Framework matters 30:18 — The shortage of wheelchair accessible homes and the push for 10% M4(3) 33:17 — How local plans and developers continue to fail disabled people 42:28 — The economic case for accessible housing 48:21 — Why accessible homes must work inside and out 53:02 — Where to find Glyn and learn more Keywords Accessible housing, wheelchair accessible homes, spinal cord injury, Spinal Injuries Association, Glyn Hayes, M4(2), M4(3), National Planning Policy Framework, NPPF, local councillors, planning policy, accessible homes, disability housing, inclusive design, housing crisis, temporary accommodation, housing advocacy, wheelchair users, local plans, planning committees, developers, economic case for accessible housing, universal design, disabled parking, dropped kerbs, holistic design Contact details Glyn Hayes / Spinal Injuries Association LinkedIn: Glyn Hayes Website: www.spinal.co.uk Email: www.veredusproperty.com 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.com 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter

    55 min
  3. Equity of Experience: Rethinking Accessibility in Architecture with Suzanne Tate

    Feb 3

    Equity of Experience: Rethinking Accessibility in Architecture with Suzanne Tate

    Season 2 Ep 2 Summary Ruth Hunter is joined by Suzanne Tate, founder of Studio TO, an award-winning architecture practice with a passion for inclusive design and creating spaces that support human potential. Together they explore why accessibility should never be an afterthought, how discrimination has been designed into our buildings, and why the industry must move beyond tick-box compliance to focus on equity of experience, how a space feels to move through, arrive in, and belong in. Suzanne also shares insight from her role judging the Civic Trust Awards (including the Selwyn Goldsmith Award for Universal Design), including standout examples of inclusive architecture and a real-world case where “public” design still pushed wheelchair users to a lesser side entrance. Chapters 00:00 — Welcome + introduction to Suzanne Tate and Studio TO 01:12 — How Ruth and Suzanne met and why this conversation has been a long time coming 03:03 — Suzanne’s approach: architecture through psychology, wellbeing and human potential 05:20 — Why design education misses accessibility and how Suzanne learned through lived exposure 07:50 — Experiencing the built world differently: wheelchairs, blindness, autism and sensory needs 11:04 — Why awareness still isn’t widespread (architects, developers and homeowners) 12:01 — Designing for life: the questions private clients should be asked during renovations 12:59 — Beyond compliance: why “code-based” design doesn’t create inclusive experiences 16:29 — Civic Trust judging: what they assess beyond aesthetics and architecture trends 18:52 — A standout project: Southeast Dance in Brighton and why it’s a benchmark 21:18 — Why a brilliant project still might not win (and how high the bar is) 22:05 — The “how did this happen?” moment: a new public entrance with steps 24:39 — Side entrances and inequality: why equity of experience matters 25:33 — A major shift: designing for emotional experience, not just widths and regs 27:08 — Designing for children and what it teaches us about scale and perception 28:13 — Proving the model: Ruth and Suzanne’s first joint project and what it aims to show 29:52 — The language problem: why “accessible design” creates resistance and assumptions 31:20 — Reframing as humanity, wellbeing and intuitive support (not “ugly” adaptations) 33:11 — Invisible Creations and the power of normalising supportive features 35:55 — The commercial question: value, rent and demand (and why we need proof) 36:58 — Fundamentals developers can implement now without blowing budgets 39:03 — Suzanne’s magic wand: mindset shift before anything else changes 39:55 — Suzanne’s message: challenge yourself, every small change compounds 40:57 — Where to find Studio TO + how to connect with Suzanne Keywords Universal design, inclusive design, accessible housing, equity of experience, discrimination by design, Civic Trust Awards, Selwyn Goldsmith Award, Studio TO, architecture, interior architecture, sensory design, autism-friendly spaces, wellbeing in buildings, mobility, wheelchair access, level thresholds, wider doorways, corridor widths, prams and strollers, ageing population, design legacy, inclusive workplaces, Brighton Southeast Dance, side entrance accessibility, Invisible Creations, grab rails, supportive design features Contact details Suzanne Tate / Studio TO Instagram: studio_to_london LinkedIn: Suzanne Tate Website: www.studio-to.co.uk Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.com 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.com 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living!

    44 min
  4. Lord Richard Best — Why Accessible Housing Still Isn’t the Default (and What Must Change)

    Jan 8

    Lord Richard Best — Why Accessible Housing Still Isn’t the Default (and What Must Change)

    Summary Ruth Hunter is joined by Lord Richard Best, one of the UK’s most influential voices in housing policy and a long-standing campaigner for Lifetime Homes and inclusive design. Lord Best shares how the Lifetime Homes movement began, why accessibility progress has stalled, and what needs to change now — including making M4(2) the default through Building Regulations and creating trusted Good Home Hubs so people can get impartial support to adapt their homes before crisis hits. The conversation also explores the power of major housebuilders, the economics of preventing falls, and why stigma and poor design still stop people from accepting adaptations. Chapters 00:00 — Welcome + introduction to Lord Richard Best 01:39 — The letter that changed everything: Dr Jenny Morris calls out a lack of accessibility 03:20 — Creating Lifetime Homes: the 16 principles and “homes for a whole lifetime” 05:00 — Housebuilders’ resistance and why standards work best when they’re mandatory 06:22 — The lift analogy: how regulation normalises better design 08:30 — Why we need to move beyond M4(1): the case for M4(2) as baseline 09:48 — Lifetime Homes vs specialist older persons’ housing: why both matter 11:31 — Falls, delayed discharge, and the real cost of inaccessible homes 12:56 — The biggest lever: upgrading Building Regulations (M4(2) as mandatory) 16:04 — The “oligopoly”: how a handful of major builders shape delivery 18:23 — Downsizing as a housing solution: accessible homes unlocking family stock 19:33 — A practical model: redeveloping underused garage sites into accessible homes 23:05 — Planning delays aren’t just policy — they’re resourcing and skills 26:14 — Retrofitting reality: we’ll never build enough new homes for an ageing population 28:42 — The “push factor”: why people act late, not early 30:03 — DFG support and why many people still don’t know where to start 31:03 — Equity loans for adaptations: unlocking value to fund home improvements 32:40 — BATH-OUT: why bathing is one of the most powerful adaptations 36:02 — Stigma and aesthetics: why people refuse adaptations (and what good design changes) 38:41 — Safety and “visual markers”: how poor exterior design can increase vulnerability 40:28 — Two priorities: upgrade regs + create Good Home Hubs 46:44 — Political churn: why progress keeps resetting (housing minister turnover) 48:46 — How to contact Lord Best Keywords Accessible housing, Lifetime Homes, universal design, Building Regulations, Approved Document M, M4(1), M4(2), M4(3), inclusive design, ageing population, occupational therapy (OT), Disabled Facilities Grant (DFG), home adaptations, walk-in showers, falls prevention, delayed discharge, social housing, planning system, housebuilder oligopoly, Good Home Hubs, Centre for Ageing Better, Habinteg, Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Dr Jenny Morris Contact details Lord Richard Best: best@parliament.uk 🔗 Connect with Lord Best on LinkedIn (search: Lord Best)   Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.com 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.com 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living!

    48 min
  5. From Planning Battles to Beautiful Homes: The Story of 1 Level Developments

    12/10/2025

    From Planning Battles to Beautiful Homes: The Story of 1 Level Developments

    Season 2 - Ep 1 Summary In this episode of Accessible Housing Matters UK, Ruth kicks off Season 2 with a deep dive into accessible bungalow design with small-scale developer Allan Craigen, founder and director of  1 level Developments.. Allan shares his journey from running a scaffolding business to buying a modest plot of land at auction with the vision of creating a flagship accessible bungalow scheme. He and Ruth talk candidly about planning refusals over garden sizes, the true cost of surveys and drainage strategies, and why choosing the right architect and builder is absolutely critical when you’re aiming for more than just “wide doors and a ramp”. They then dig into the nuts and bolts of inclusive design: hybrid M4(2)/M4(3) layouts, level thresholds instead of ramps, properly sized bathrooms and hallways, reinforced walls for future grab rails, and an accessible kitchen designed with input from accessibility specialist Adam Thomas. Allan is refreshingly honest about the mistakes, the extra costs (hello piling!), and what he’d do differently next time to make accessible development scalable, sellable, and commercially viable. Whether you’re a developer, investor, designer, OT, or you just care about where we’re all going to live as we age, this episode is full of practical insight from someone who’s learning by doing – one accessible bungalow at a time. Chapters 00:00 – Welcome, Season 2 intro & meet Allan 02:06 – From scaffolding to small developer: Allan’s background 06:25 – Buying the plot at auction & why bungalows 10:48 – First planning application and refusal over garden sizes 14:45 – Surveys, drainage strategies & the hidden cost of planning 18:33 – Should you do pre-apps and options? Lessons in risk 24:00 – Finding the right architect and discovering accessibility isn’t “just wider doors” 27:45 – Hallways, bathrooms & a hybrid approach between M4(2) and M4(3) 33:20 – Designing an accessible kitchen with Symphony and Adam Thomas 37:38 – Bathroom layouts, grab rails, plywood backing & real-life usability 45:10 – MMC vs traditional build, piling costs and below-ground surprises 52:00 – Working with builders: level thresholds, ramps and practical site issues 59:40 – Heating choices, underfloor vs radiators and keeping corridors clear 01:02:20 – Selling the bungalows & creating a bespoke combined home 01:07:35 – Key learnings, what Allan would do differently & marketing future schemes 01:12:20 – How to connect with Allan & closing thoughts Keywords Accessible housing, Accessible bungalows, Single-storey homes, Ageing in place, Universal design, Part M, M4(2), M4(3), Inclusive design, Planning permission, Garden size standards, Developers, Property investors, Accessible kitchens, Wet rooms, Level access, Building costs, Piling, Small-scale development, Future-proof homes Contact details Allan Craigen – Founder, Level One Developments 📞 07815 152693 🔗 Connect with Allan on LinkedIn (search: Allan Craigen)     Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.com 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.com 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living!

    1h 15m
  6. Insights of Accessible Homes from a Building Inspector: with Jack Calveley

    09/22/2025

    Insights of Accessible Homes from a Building Inspector: with Jack Calveley

    EP - 10 Summary In this episode of Accessible Housing Matters UK, Ruth Hunter is joined by Jack Calveley, a registered building inspector with a passion for ensuring accessibility isn’t just a box-ticking exercise but a lived reality. Together, they unpack Approved Document M4 – the section of UK building regulations that covers accessible and adaptable housing. Jack explains the key differences between M4(1) visitable dwellings and M4(2) adaptable dwellings, the most common mistakes developers make, and why working with the right contractors and designers is crucial to getting compliance right. Whether you’re a developer, investor, architect, or simply interested in how we can create homes that work for everyone, this conversation is packed with practical advice and real-world insights. Chapters 00:00 – Welcome & introduction 01:05 – Jack’s journey into building control and accessibility 04:00 – Understanding Part M and why it matters 06:58 – The difference between M4(1) and M4(2) 09:32 – Reinforced walls, wider stairs, and future-proofing homes 12:30 – Common mistakes developers make on site 16:00 – Finding the right contractors and architects 20:53 – Why knowledge and collaboration are crucial 23:39 – The design details that make the biggest difference 27:49 – Accessibility in refurbishments and small-scale developments 30:24 – What you can and can’t remove when renovating 33:11 – Preparing for the future of housing standards 37:12 – Final thoughts and how to connect with Jack Keywords Accessible housing, Building regulations, Approved Document M, M4(1), M4(2), Adaptable homes, Visitable dwellings, Building control, Universal design, Housing standards, Developers, Property investors, Refurbishments, Future-proof housing Contact details  Jack Calveley – Registered Building Inspector Find Jack on LinkedIn (search: Jack T Calveley)   Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.co.uk 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.co.uk 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living!

    36 min
  7. Accessible Homes Week Special: Setting M4(2) as the New Normal

    09/08/2025

    Accessible Homes Week Special: Setting M4(2) as the New Normal

    EP - 10 This special Accessible Homes Week episode of Accessible Housing Matters UK features Ruth in conversation with Christina McGill, Director of Social Impact & External Affairs at Habinteg. Christina has been at the forefront of national campaigns — from For Accessible Homes Week to co-chairing the Home Coalition — making sure accessibility is recognised as an issue that benefits everyone, not just a minority. Together, Ruth and Christina explore why Approved Document M4(1) isn’t enough, why M4(2) should be the baseline for all new housing, and what’s needed to deliver M4(3) wheelchair user homes at scale. They bust common myths around cost, space, and demand, reveal the real social and economic benefits of accessible housing, and set out a clear 3-step roadmap for government and industry. 👉 As part of Accessible Homes Week, don’t miss the special webinar panel — with lived experience voices, forward-thinking local authorities, and new research findings. 📅 Wednesday 10th September, 11:00am (BST) 🔗 Register here for the Accessible Homes Week Webinar  Chapters [00:01] Welcome & intro to Christina + Habinteg [02:26] Accessible Homes Week webinar preview (panel + new research) [04:04] Why M4(1) falls short (steps allowed, tiny WCs, garden access) [10:37] Attitude + design: level from the outset vs “add a ramp” [13:56] The cost myth: typical M4(2)/M4(3) uplifts when planned early [16:38] Real demand: waiting lists, 400k+ in unsuitable homes, data caveats [20:45] Marketing gap: why private M4(3) homes aren’t reaching buyers [22:16] Economic & health benefits: fewer falls, quicker discharge, 4× work likelihood [27:24] Making accessibility beautiful (Invisible Creations & normalising safety) [31:45] Message to local authorities: NPPF, evidence, and setting M4(2) expectations [38:03] Will M4(3) help planning outcomes? On-the-ground examples [42:57] Policy levers now: housing plan baseline, Homes England criteria, New Towns, training [47:59] Many developer obligations; why a single baseline simplifies delivery [50:51] Building control: consistent enforcement & best-practice upskilling [57:32] Christina’s 3-step roadmap (policy → education → co-design) [1:01:50] Designing with lived experience (ramps, landings, natural light) [1:02:31] Wrap-up & invites Keywords Accessible Housing, Habinteg, Approved Document M, M4(1) / M4(2) / M4(3), Wheelchair Accessible Homes, Universal Design, Planning Policy, Building Control, Homes England, NPPF, New Towns, Falls Prevention, Hospital Discharge, Inclusive Design, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire Contact Details Guest — Christina McGill / Habinteg • Website: https://www.habinteg.org.uk/ • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christina-mcgill-53150110/ • Email: cmcgill@habinteg.org.uk Host — Ruth Hunter • Website: www.veredusproperty.co.uk • Email: www.veredusproperty.co.uk 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.co.uk 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living!

    1h 1m
  8. Before You Call the Architect, Call These People

    08/12/2025

    Before You Call the Architect, Call These People

    EP-9 Summary: In this episode of Accessible Housing Matters UK, Ruth Hunter talks with Georgina Berry and Victoria Malcher from OT33 Occupational Therapy. With decades of experience as housing-specialist OTs, they reveal how their work bridges the gap between clinical assessment and practical housing solutions. From bespoke adaptations to future-proofed design, Georgina and Victoria explain why involving an OT early in the build process can save time, money, and stress — and lead to homes that genuinely work for the people who live in them. Chapters: [00:00] Introduction: Meet Georgina and Victoria, and learn about OT33’s housing and moving & handling expertise. [03:42] What Is Occupational Therapy? Understanding the role of an OT and how it supports quality of life. [07:44] Specialist Housing Focus: Why not all OTs are the same — and why developers need housing specialists. [10:09] Finding the Right OT: How to access an OT through local authorities or privately. [12:41] Bespoke Assessments: How OT33 tailors recommendations to each client’s needs and lifestyle. [19:24] Designing for Complex Needs: From turning circles to carers’ accommodation — what “fit for purpose” really means. [24:00] Top Housing Priorities: Insights from clients, families, and support teams — with some surprises. [29:03] Impactful Projects: Real-life stories of homes that transformed lives. [33:20] Future-Proofing Homes: Why developers should think beyond minimum building regs — and consider lifts. [35:35] Final Message: Bring OTs in from the start to create homes that truly work. Keywords Occupational Therapy, Accessible Design, Inclusive Housing, Developer Insights, Future-Proofing Contact Details for OT33: 📧 Email: www.ot33.co.uk 📞 Phone: 01604 340 988 💼 LinkedIn: Search “OT33” plus Georgina Berry and Victoria Malcher Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.com 📩 Email me directly at info@veredusproperty.com 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunter Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living!

    45 min

About

If you care about homes that work for everyone, this podcast is for you. Each episode of Accessible Housing Matters UK dives into real conversations with the people shaping the future of inclusive living — from developers and designers to policy makers and everyday people with lived experience. You’ll discover inspiring stories, innovative solutions, and practical insights that prove accessibility doesn’t mean compromise — it means better design for all. Whether you’re a property professional, architect, landlord, or someone passionate about equality and independence, you’ll come away informed, motivated, and empowered to be part of the change. Thanks for listening to Accessible Housing Matters UK! If you’re inspired to learn more or want to explore working with me on creating accessible, inclusive, and beautiful properties, I’d love to hear from you. 👉 Visit www.veredusproperty.co.uk 📩 Email me directly at ruth@veredusproperty.co.uk 🔗 Connect with me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthhunterproperty Together, we can make accessible housing the standard, not the exception. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who cares about inclusive living! N.B - Huge thank you to Stephen Beard of Accessible Housing Matters USA for allowing me to share the title for the UK version of the podcast.