BBC News, Manchester
People who bought a house on a new housing estate were able to get £ 10,000 from their mortgage by Mucking to help them make them.
He launched landscape, landscape, paint and decorated on St. William Church and Presbytion Site in the Vigan to get a shortage.
The scheme run by the Housing Association Prima and Charity Housing Peepal Building Communities (HPBC) is known as “equity of sweat”.
While mother-two Chloe Redcliffe said that saving for a deposit was impossible, by putting hours on the site, “I was given a chance to realize my dream as a single parent”.
He said: “I, my mother, father and sister loved working at my house and building a great community.
“Others who did so are now my neighbors.”
Those who participated, they served 500 hours in each for shared-owned development.
He helped build 13 apartments and 14 new-old houses.
Rachel McCoy, a nurse, who works with Ms. Radcliffe at the beauty salon near her, said it would have been difficult to go to the property ladder without a plan.
“This meant that we could get our home without saving for deposit,” he said.
Prima Group CEO John Gedar said that Sweat Equity was “a great option for Bank of Mum and Dad”.
He said: “Instead of putting a hand in his pocket to help in a deposit, not every parent cannot bear-anything shook his hand on the shovel and contributed to the equity hours of sweat on his children’s site.”
HPBC President Reverend Dr. Shannon Ladbetter said the project “provided cheap, accessible houses for those who had never dreamed of it”.