A handsome six-bedroom house on a Birmingham street is the centrepiece of a property developer’s glossy sales brochure.

It shows impressive before and after photos of the family home which has been transformed into what it openly declares is an ‘asylum seekers’ haven’.

Since being repurposed, the property has doubled in value to £250,000.

It has been leased to the Home Office for seven years in a juicy deal guaranteeing a private landlord £2,000 rent per month, with all repairs covered.

‘This has maximised the earning potential and ensured a stable, long-term income,’ states the brochure of the developer, which turns family homes into houses in multi-occupation (HMOs) to feed Britain’s insatiable market for migrant accommodation.