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    Water Smart Growth Board: drainage and SuDS implications for project engineers

    March 30, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Water Smart Growth Board: drainage and SuDS implications for project engineers

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    The Future Homes Hub has launched a cross-sector Water Smart Growth Board (WSGB) to coordinate integrated water management for new housing growth across England, linking developers, water companies and regulators. The WSGB will focus on aligning housing delivery with water resource constraints in stressed catchments, promoting measures such as higher water-efficiency standards in new homes and strategic SuDS deployment. For civil and geotechnical teams, the move signals closer scrutiny of drainage design, surface water attenuation and groundwater impacts at masterplanning stage.

    Technical Brief

    • For similar large-scale housing schemes, expect earlier requirement for catchment-scale water impact assessments at outline stage.

    Our Take

    Future Homes Hub’s creation of both the Water Smart Growth Board (WSGB) and, as reported on 20 March 2026, the Embodied Carbon and Resource Efficiency Board signals that England’s new‑build standards are likely to evolve via parallel specialist boards rather than a single overarching body, which can complicate compliance planning for housebuilders.

    Because Future Homes Hub is already coordinating the New Homes Sector Transition Plan through ECREB, WSGB is well placed to embed water‑efficiency and drainage expectations into the same transition framework, meaning developers in England may see water performance treated on a par with embodied carbon in upcoming guidance and procurement criteria.

    Within our 155 Policy stories, Future Homes Hub is one of the few organisations repeatedly shaping both carbon and resource standards for projects, so its WSGB outputs are likely to be treated by major UK housebuilders as de facto benchmarks even before any formal regulation catches up.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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