News

Sleek city apartments with stunning river views

Sandringham House – the newest phase at One Tower Bridge – has 44 luxury apartments with stylish interiors, a private spa and virtual golf centre.

One Tower Bridge, being built right next to the iconic London landmark, is shaping up to become a sparkling addition to the so-called “string of pearls” along the South Bank cultural quarter.

The cluster of nine architecturally distinctive buildings faces the Tower of London on the opposite bank of the Thames and includes a 20-storey skyscraper with just one apartment on each floor, the top one a spectacular triplex penthouse with roof garden and glazed enclosure.

But the development of 356 flats is about the urban realm as much as river views. One Tower Bridge is not gated and will integrate seamlessly with the riverside promenade and a public park alongside City Hall.

A listed Victorian school on the site is being converted into a boutique hotel and a performance space will be created, while high-quality landscaping will include an interactive fountain clock with water jets and colour-changing lights allowing residents and visitors to choreograph their own water display.

Berkeley Homes, the developer, is offering luxury flats with smart technology that is new to London. Residents will have “keyless” entry to their apartment and be able to remotely control heating and lighting through an iPhone, while a touch-screen command will deliver their car from a stacker system underground.

Sandringham House, pictured, is the latest phase, 44 apartments in a sleek-design block clad in glass and stone. Classy interiors have herringbone-pattern wood flooring, built-in coffee machines and wine coolers and a home automation system controlling blinds, lighting, heating and audiovisual equipment. Residents will also have use of a private spa and be able to play virtual golf.

Prices from £950,000.

 

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Slick city homes rise up in Aldgate

It is rare to find a part of the City fringe where a development boom is only just getting into its stride. Aldgate, on the eastern edge of the financial district, used to be a dead zone after working hours. However, close proximity to a prosperous banking community has helped to seed regeneration.

A new phase of apartments has been released at Goodman’s Fields, which in medieval times supplied food to London but is now becoming a new seven-acre “urban quarter” with a mix of homes, shops, restaurants and bars, hotel, public park and plaza.

The development aims to be part of the Square Mile yet have its own identity, and will eventually include more than 900 homes. Meranti House is a 20-storey tower with 107 flats and duplex penthouses boasting splendid views, and with a residents’ pool, gym and spa in the plan. Prices from £650,000.

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Now is the time to buy London’s new-build homes off plan (Evening Standard- 24 Jan 2014)

Developers are in overdrive to meet rising demands, due to a new homes shortage coupled with the popular Help to Buy scheme, in the capital. We take a look at the latest new-builds and fabulous restorations.

The new-build sector pauses for breath in January as a rule, as developers wait for spring to draw home buyers out of hibernation. Buoyed by the Government’s Help to Buy low-deposit scheme, however, builders are throwing open show home doors and unveiling mock-up apartments in hastily constructed marketing suites, as the shortage of completed new homes continues to push home seekers into off-plan buying.

December saw the highest sales rate in six years, according to the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. The momentum is expected to continue this year, bringing more price hikes, with Marylebone and the South Bank hitting the highest returns.

Today’s cost-conscious buyers want the best possible value for money in areas with growth. Developers in hot competition are coming up with low-maintenance homes with imaginative architecture, to suit most budgets.

New-build homes have become so popular that the price premium is at a new high, as much as 60 per cent more expensive than older homes of the same size in the same area, according to property adviser Knight Frank.

To find the right home at the right price, Londoners are relocating to other boroughs or crossing the river. Estate agent Winkworth, which has more than 60 branches across London, says the main flows are from north and west London to south London for   significantly cheaper family homes and new London Overground stations. This mobility is helping to revitalise areas such as Brockley. Run-down districts are opening up to homebuyers, too, with developers unlocking industrial sites, restoring railway arches and building apartments and townhouses plus offices and new parks.

Historic charm
Few London districts have the authentic, village-like charm of the Georgian conservation area that surrounds Myddelton Square in Islington. Once the heart of the now-defunct Borough of Finsbury, by the Nineties the area had lost much of its identity, eclipsed by regeneration going on around its edges at Angel, King’s Cross and Clerkenwell.

However, the pendulum has started to swing back. Look here for a central London area with character and family life: parish church, primary school, Sadler’s Wells theatre, a newly built health centre and small, independent shops for everyday needs. Two listed houses, once offices, have been restored and given a design makeover, including glass-walled rear extensions. Prices from £5.7 million. And coming soon on River Street is a rare new-build scheme of six townhouses in a gated mews.

Family-friendly Fulham
A new private garden square, London Square Fulham, offers 40 Georgian-style townhouses and extras usually found only with apartment living — gated security, underground parking and concierge. Cars are parked in an underground garage with direct access to the houses, while pedestrians arrive via a listed double-arched entrance. The houses range from 1,400sq ft to 4,000sq ft, with three to five bedrooms and have light basements opening on to patio gardens. At the heart of each house is an oak-and-glass staircase, with surrounding open-plan living space. Prices from £2.6 million.

For singles, couples and second-steppers
New loft developments in London are rare these days as most of the best buildings were converted in the Nineties and Noughties, but The Piano Works in Kentish Town offers good-value spaces in a handsome Victorian factory. Prices from £400,000.

Balham, meanwhile — popular with young metro types who fill the bars, gastropubs and delis along the lively high road — boasts Flow, a new apartment scheme close to the lively strip and the Tube station. The flats are priced from £390,995 to £725,995.

The historic core of Westminster is witnessing the biggest injection of new homes since the Edwardian mansion block boom a century ago. Traditionally favoured by MPs and senior civil servants, the attractive location and classical buildings are pulling in the buyers, with 73 Great Peter Street among smart new developments. The scheme offers 22 apartments, from studios to penthouses with views of Big Ben. Prices from £1.37 million.

First-timers zone in
Affordable shared-ownership flats in Zone 1 are a tantalising prospect for low-budget first-time buyers. Aspire is part of a 21-storey residential tower being built above Aldgate East Tube station on the City fringe. One-bedroom homes start at £105,700 for a 35 per cent share (full price £302,000). With a five per cent deposit of £5,285, combined rent and mortgage repayments would be £849.48 a month.

River views to Kew
The name Kew Bridge West might be slightly stretching the imagination but this cluster of new homes rising up on the Brentford bank of the Thames has views across the river to Kew’s Royal Botanic Gardens. The development’s curved, turreted style is influenced, says developer St James, by the architectural style of rural France. Prices  from £345,000.

Kensington remains the location of choice for the rich and powerful despite its dreary high street. But suddenly a crop of new homes has widened the area’s draw. The Ladbroke Grove is a contemporary-design new-build scheme on the border with Notting Hill. Prices from £425,000.Nearby is 205 Holland Park Avenue, another new-build — 41 apartments with winter gardens and roof terraces.


At 375 Kensington High Street is the Royal Borough’s biggest housing scheme, a complex of modern blocks with 339 flats, spa, private cinema and concierge. Prices from £910,000.

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House prices rise in three quarters of postcodes

House prices in 75 per cent of postcodes across England and Wales registered price gains over the past year, up from a fifth in 2012, according to the property analyst Hometrack.

The report found that soaring demand and weak supply has pushed the average home up 4.4 per cent to £206,726 following a 0.3 per cent dip last year.

London and the south east experienced the biggest gains with annual price hikes of 9.1 per cent and five per cent respectively.

Meanwhile house prices in northern England tumbled by 0.5 per cent.

Hometrack said in a statement: “The strongest market conditions and impetus for price inflation is set to remain focused on southern England. A broader-based recovery in the housing market is dependent upon growth in the real economy, jobs and household incomes.”

On a month-on-month basis, prices rose by 0.1 per cent in Yorkshire and Humberside and the north-west, by 0.2 per cent in Wales, by 0.3 per cent in the West Midlands and the south-west, by 0.5 per cent in East Anglia, by 0.7 per cent in the south-east and by one per cent in the Capital.

House prices remained the same in the east Midlands and the north-east.

Hometrack said buyer demand rose by 25 per cent in 2013 which marks the fastest rise in three years.

In contrast the supply of homes for sale rose six per cent, the slowest pace since the survey began in 2001.

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Hometrack predict house prices will continue to rise in 2014

Increased demand coupled with a fall in the supply of new homes was the main cause of a 4.4 per cent rise in house prices in 2013, according to the latest report from property analysts Hometrack, published today.

Demand for residential property grew by 25 per cent in 2013 but the supply of new homes only increased by six per cent, according to the latest survey of UK estate agents.

Richard Donnell director of research at Hometrack said: “Demand grew at the fastest rate for three years while the supply of homes for sale grew at the lowest level recorded over the 12 year history of the survey.

“Scarcity of supply was the result of higher sales volumes eroding the stock of homes for sale. The launch of Help to Buy was a clear sign of Government support for the housing market which encouraged a sustained increase in buyer numbers, especially over the second half of the year.

“Record low mortgage rates also played an important role in higher prices over 2013.”

However, in December, there was the first fall in demand and sales for 11 months.

Hometrack said this was due to the normal seasonal slowdown in activity in the property market in December and average house prices still went up by 0.5 per cent, the fourth consecutive monthly rise.

London and the South East continue to be the regions that are driving up overall prices with annual house price inflation of 9.1 per cent and 5.0 per cent respectively.

The only region to see a fall in house prices was the North of England where prices fell by 0.5 per cent.

However, Yorkshire and Humberside and the North West saw prices rise by significantly less than the national average with increases of just 0.4 per cent and 0.5 per cent.

Mr Donnell said he expected the trend of rising house prices to continue in 2014 but whether this turns into a sustainable national recovery depends on how the overall economy performs.

“Overall we expect the momentum in house price growth to spill over into 2014 supported by a continued lack of supply and rising demand.

“A broader based recovery in the housing market is dependent upon growth in the real economy, jobs and household incomes,” said Mr Donnell.

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Pre-launch: Lovat Lane

We are delighted to provide information ahead of the launch of a new development in Lovat Lane, the City, EC3.

This is a rare opportunity to own a perfectly situated pied-a-terre or City home set amid the rich history of the City of London. The development is eight beautifully refurbished one/two-bedroom residences within a classically featured 19th-century building. It offers a range of luxuriously appointed, high-ceilinged apartments in sizes ranging from 526 to 1,184 square feet. The area suffers an extreme undersupply of housing and benefits from a high-demand rental market. It is close to Monument and Bank stations, Fenchurch Street mainline station and many office buildings including the Walkie- Talkie and Plantation House.

The development is being sold off-plan in the Far East with an exhibition booked for next weekend and it expected to sell quickly.

 

Enquiries: Christian@propertyinsidelondon.com.

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Updated property list

We are delighted to have achieved a number of important property sales for clients and to be trusted with selling further property for them.

We hope that you had a wonderful Christmas and are looking forward to 2014.

Please follow the link for our updated London property list: January 2014 list

We look forward to working with you.

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Foreign buyers of British homes up by 40pc

More than two million foreign investors own UK property for the first time, according to analysis of data from HM Revenue & Customs.

Research by accountancy UHY Hacker Young also showed there was a surge of around 110,000 new buyers in the most recent year for which the figures were collated.

It meant the total rose 6pc from 1.93m to 2.04m between 2011 and 2012.

The increase over five years was 39pc increase in the number of overseas landlords, climbing from 1.46 million in 2006.

Huge numbers of homes in central London in particular have been bought as long-term investments by wealthy foreigners and expats in recent years. London is seen as a safe haven by investors, who have driven a boom in prices.

The house price boom, in which house prices in London have shot up 9.4pc over the past year, is expected to continue in the coming years. Analysts at Knight Frank have forecast a 24pc rise in the value of UK house prices by 2018.

Mark Giddens, of UHY Hacker Young, said: “The UK economy is one of the world’s most liquid, and UK property is seen globally as a safe haven from the effects of a financial crash or from national governments’ interference in the assets of private individuals.

“That has driven fierce demand for prime property in London and the South East in particular.”

But the high levels of demand from overseas investors could cool next year, argue UHY Hacker Young. This is because earlier this month the Government announced that foreign investors will have to pay capital gains tax when they sell homes in the UK from April 2015.

Previously overseas investors did not have to pay tax on the profits they made from British homes. The Government is expecting to rake in £125m from the “oligarch tax” between 2015 and 2019.

The rule change makes UK property a less attractive investment option for overseas investors, who have been blamed for helping to push property prices to record highs and taking home-ownership out of the reach of many UK workers.

“While the Treasury has already increased its tax take on foreign-owned properties in recent years, from £230m in 2007 to £379m last year, it is now looking to ensure that it gets an even greater share of the substantial revenue generated by London’s high end property market,” said Mr Giddens.

Source: The Telegraph

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Canary Wharf plots new tech neighbourhood

CANARY Wharf Group submitted revised plans yesterday to expand its east London estate by building more than 3,000 homes, shops and offices that will target fast-growing media and technology firms.

New Wood Wharf is a 20-acre semi-derelict site that was previously used for shipping and storage of timber and is about a third of the size of the main skyscraper district to the west.

The new masterplan, which includes a 57-storey luxury tower as well as affordable homes and two parks, will mark the first major residential development for the business-focused area.

The scheme will also offer 2.57m square feet of new offices, which Canary Wharf hopes will attract more creative media and technology companies to reduce its reliance on the financial sector, which has reduced its requirements for new office space since the crisis.

Sir George Iacobescu said the move towards residential was a “reflection of the demand” in the market.

“[It] is an opportunity for us to further expand the appeal of Canary Wharf by creating a new and exciting mixed use neighbourhood at Wood Wharf which will offer greater diversity and amenity and a richer urban fabric for the fast emerging City Centre of Canary Wharf,” he said.

Construction is expected to start in the first quarter of 2014, with the first buildings completed in 2017.

Source: CityAM

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Great Portland Estates offloads 20 St James’s Street for £54.5m

Great Portland won planning consent in 2012 but has decided to sell after strong interest

GREAT Portland Estates has sold a prime West End site between Piccadilly and St James’s Park to a German pension fund managed by US property investor Pramerica for £54.5m.

Chief executive Toby Courtauld said yesterday that the group had originally planned to refurbish the building in 2015 to exploit the lack of new space in the West End.

However, it decided to sell 20 St James’s Street after receiving strong interest in the 1930s building, which it acquired in 2010 for £42.5m. “As a consequence of a strong off-market approach, it made financial sense for us to sell the property now and invest the proceeds into other schemes in our exceptional development programme”, Courtauld said.

The 55,490 sq ft property is partially let to seven tenants including media group Ocean Outdoor and retail cigar merchant James Fox, producing a net rent of £1.2m a year.

The deal reflects a net initial yield of 2.1 per cent.

Source: CityAM

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