---
title: "New Google DeepMind AI Aims to Unlock UK House Building"
date: 2026-06-17
author: "Barry Elad"
featured_image: "https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/google-deepmind-ai-aims-to-unlock-uk-housing-issues.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Artificial Intelligence"
    url: "/artificial-intelligence.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# New Google DeepMind AI Aims to Unlock UK House Building

Google DeepMind and the UK government have unveiled a new AI-powered planning tool designed to cut planning application decision times by half and help accelerate the country’s ambitious home building goals.

## Quick Summary – TLDR:

- Google DeepMind, the UK government, Google Cloud, and Faculty are developing an AI planning assistant for local councils.
- The tool aims to reduce planning application decision times by 50% and support the UK’s goal of building 1.5 million homes by 2029.
- Early testing is underway in Barnet, Camden, and Dorset, with a nationwide rollout planned from 2027.
- Planning officers will remain fully responsible for all final decisions, with AI acting only as an assistant.

## What Happened?

The UK government has partnered with **Google DeepMind** to develop an **AI-powered planning tool** that could significantly speed up the country’s housing approval process. The initiative is part of a wider effort to modernize planning systems and help deliver the government’s target of building 1.5 million homes by 2029.

The prototype is currently being tested with local planning authorities in **Barnet**, **Camden**, and **Dorset**. Officials believe the technology could reduce decision making times by 50%, allowing planning officers to spend less time on administrative work and more time assessing complex developments.

> We’re working with [@SciTechgovuk](https://x.com/SciTechgovuk?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw), [@mhclg](https://x.com/mhclg?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) and [@i\_dot\_ai](https://x.com/i_dot_ai?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) on a new AI housing application planning prototype. 🏡  
>   
> By cutting down the time spent on repetitive tasks, it could help planning officers focus their attention on complex projects and reduce processing times by up to 50%.… [pic.twitter.com/p5B800YApF](https://t.co/p5B800YApF)
> 
> — Google DeepMind (@GoogleDeepMind) [June 17, 2026](https://x.com/GoogleDeepMind/status/2067188693694136664?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## AI Takes on Planning Paperwork

Planning officers across England often spend hours reviewing large volumes of documents, policy guidance, consultation responses, and historical planning records before making decisions. This process has long been viewed as one of the biggest bottlenecks in housing development.

The new **Augmented Planning Decisions** prototype is designed to act as a digital assistant for planners. Rather than replacing human decision makers, the system helps organize information and complete routine tasks more efficiently.

The tool can:

- **Consolidate information from multiple planning documents**.
- **Identify relevant local and national planning policies**.
- **Highlight potential compliance issues**.
- **Summarize consultation responses and public feedback**.
- **Draft initial planning assessments and reports**.

Officials say every recommendation generated by the AI must still be reviewed and approved by a planning officer before any decision is made.

## Focus on Everyday Planning Applications

According to government data, **householder applications account for nearly 70% of planning submissions each year**. These include projects such as loft conversions, extensions, and home improvements.

While these applications are often straightforward, they still require significant administrative work. By automating much of that process, councils can devote more resources to larger and more complex housing developments.

One government statement highlighted the challenge facing planning departments today:

“

The English planning system is clogged up. Planning officers are forced to spend half their time reviewing applications to convert an attic, putting those for housing estates and warehouses on hold. Built with planning officers, our AI system will take the drudgery out of reviewing simple planning applications so they can make quick decisions.

A UK Government Employee





Another statement added:

“

The UK has an opportunity to build the homes our communities need, but local councils face a mountain of paperwork. That’s why we’re co creating a sophisticated planning tool directly with councils to solve real world bottlenecks. This will help significantly cut decision times, freeing up planners to focus on the future to get Britain building faster.







## Building on the Success of Extract

The new planning assistant builds on the success of **Extract**, an [AI tool](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/ai-tools-usage-statistics/) developed by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government and the government’s Incubator for AI team.

Extract converts complex planning documents and legacy PDF files into structured digital data, making information easier to search and analyze.

Following successful trials across more than 20 local planning authorities, Extract has now been rolled out to councils across England. Officials estimate the tool could save the average council around **255 hours of manual work every year**.

The government says both projects are powered by [**Gemini** technology](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/google-gemini-ai-statistics/) running on Google Cloud infrastructure, providing security controls and safeguards for handling sensitive planning data.

## Housing Reform Meets AI Innovation

The launch comes as the government pushes ahead with broader housing reforms through the **Planning and Infrastructure Act 2025** and updated planning policies that place greater pressure on local authorities to meet housing targets.

Recent figures suggest planning approvals are improving, with detailed approvals rising 17% year over year as of April 2026. However, challenges remain across the housing market, including weaker buyer demand and falling asking prices.

Officials hope AI can help remove administrative barriers that have slowed development for years while creating a more transparent and efficient planning system.

A spokesperson from Barnet Council said:

“

The tool’s ability to collect relevant information, undertake a provisional assessment, and draft the foundations of a report has the potential to save significant officer time spent working on the administration of planning applications and direct this to speeding up the decision making process for residents. In turn, this will contribute significantly to delivering our house building growth targets in the borough.

Barnet Council Spokesperson





## SQ Magazine Takeaway

I think this is one of the [most practical uses of AI](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/ai-usage-statistics/) we have seen from a government in recent years. Instead of trying to replace workers, the technology is being used to eliminate paperwork and repetitive tasks that slow down important decisions. If the trials deliver on their promise, planners could spend far more time evaluating major housing projects and far less time sorting through documents. For a country struggling to increase housing supply, that could make a real difference.