“I wish I could see what is quietly happening to my neighbourhood before everyone else does.”
The Neighbour Network Map
For investors, developers, and selling landlords
An AI map watches every council planning portal in England in real time, then cross-references each application against Companies House, the Land Registry registers, and the overseas-owners register. It surfaces patterns no human eye could see in fragmented data.
The result is intelligence the wealthiest investors already pay heavily for through consultancies: which developer is quietly assembling a site, which street is being bought up by an offshore entity, which postcode is about to become over-supplied. The data is all public. Nobody has fused it for a smaller buyer yet.
What makes this hard
There are 333 local planning portals in England, none with a common API. The data pipeline is the moat. The AI on top is the easy part.
Try the prototype
See the patterns no single register reveals
An illustrative prototype. Every company, person, title number and planning reference below is invented; nothing is fetched. It shows how the fused map would read a neighbourhood.
Neighbour Network Map
Fuse live planning applications with Companies House, Land Registry and the overseas-owners register, then surface the patterns no single source shows: quiet site assembly, offshore street buy-ups and looming over-supply.
Ancoats, Manchester. Rolling 18 month window, one council planning portal of the 333 in England.
Pick an area, then run the scan.
The map fuses fragmented public records into the patterns a neighbourhood is quietly forming, the intelligence the biggest investors already pay consultancies for.
What it reads
Three signals hiding in public data
Quiet site assembly
One developer buying adjacent plots through different vehicles looks like noise in any single register. Fused together, the assembly pattern is obvious months before a scheme is announced.
Offshore street buy-ups
When a single overseas entity is steadily acquiring a street, each purchase is invisible on its own. Cross-referenced against the Register of Overseas Entities, the concentration becomes a clear signal.
Looming over-supply
A run of planning approvals for similar units in one postcode is a warning the city-level numbers never show. The map reads it as future competition for the same tenant.
The underlying sources are all public: Companies House (opens in a new tab), HM Land Registry (opens in a new tab), the Register of Overseas Entities (opens in a new tab), and the planning applications published by England’s 333 local planning authorities.
Straight answers
Questions about the Neighbour Network Map
Tell us which one
If this is the conversation you want to have, tell us
We are spending our time on the concepts the market actually wants. If the Neighbour Network Map is one you would use, as an investor, a developer or a selling landlord, your note shapes what we build next.
The Neighbour Network Map is a concept, not a product you can buy today. The prototype above uses invented data for illustration only.