Written By Em

Em

Em Morley

Thousands of New Waterfront Homes on the Thames

For the first time ever, more people in the capital live east of London Bridge than west, predominantly due to the surge in development around Docklands.

Tens of thousands of new properties are in the pipeline at Royal Docks, Greenwich Peninsula and Woolwich. The homes are all connected by the Thames, which is being reinvented as a vital transport link, boosted by a plan to launch a new fleet of river buses, which will cover more routes.

Since the old commercial docks closed in the 1970s, the once-polluted river and surrounding industrial land have experienced great change, with regeneration projects, including modern waterfront apartments.

Tom Burke of Savills Waterfront, a specialist division of the estate agent, comments: “Once you catch the riverside bug, you’ll never want to live anywhere else.”1

Thames Clippers services carry 10,000 commuters per day and even City workers, who formerly favoured Knightsbridge and Kensington, are moving to the riverside.

Traditionally, east of Tower Bridge is cheaper than the central and western parts of the Thames. It is also more convenient for those working in the City or Canary Wharf.

Eight river bus piers between Tower Bridge and Woolwich enhance improving neighbourhoods, where buyers can find riverfront homes costing under £500,000.

Shad Thames 

Shad Thames features Victorian wharves and warehouses that have been converted into flats. It is known as the most charming part of Docklands.

One-bedroom apartments facing the Thames start at £650,000, but buyers can find homes in blocks further away for £430,000. Two-bed flats typically cost between £700,000-£1m and at least £1.5m for something spectacular.

The renovated Hop Studios in Jamaica Road has an attractive Victorian brick façade with arched windows and cargo doors. Within are new two-bed apartments priced from £1.2m.

Rotherhithe

Rotherhithe is 25% cheaper than Shad Thames and has been up-and-coming for 30 years. It is now a certified fashionable area.

London taxi firm Addison Lee states that Rotherhithe is the capital’s “destination hotspot”1, after it saw a 170% rise in passenger journeys to the area in the last three years.

Disjointed areas are being joined together and a busy waterfront district is being formed at Canada Water.

South Dock Marina is London’s largest, with 200 berths and a watersports centre. There is also a river shuttle bus to Canary Wharf. Sellar Group, the developer of the Shard, is building 1,030 homes in partnership with Notting Hill Housing in the area.

St Marychurch Street is now a charming cobbled conservation area, but was the space that the Pilgrim Fathers left for North America from in 1620.

The eastern side of Rotherhithe Peninsula, bordering Deptford, has a different atmosphere. Most of the area was demolished and infilled when the docks closed. Regeneration stopped a few years ago, but builders are back in.

Marine Wharf, which has 566 homes, boasts innovative design and draws on the area’s industrial heritage. Intertwining apartment blocks with central courtyards are clad in warm brick and rusty steel panels, with prices starting at £430,000.

Ryan Gregory, a 29-year-old equity analyst, chose to buy in Rotherhithe after leaving his family home in Brentwood, Essex. He looked for an affordable area with good investment opportunities close to the City and Canary Wharf.

He purchased a two-bed apartment at a development that had a gym and concierge. He says: “The river bus is great. Greenland Pier is a five-minute walk from where I live. It’s stress-free and I always get a seat.”1

Wapping 

Wapping is located just below Tower Bridge and runs east to Shadwell Basin. The area closest to the City has both old and new homes, overlooks two yacht basins and is the priciest part.

London Dock is a 1,800-home project being built on an ex-printworks site that spreads 15 acres. It will open up new pedestrian routes to the river and include a public square, cafes, restaurants and a new secondary school. Homes start at £869,950.

After decades of abandonment, a listed riverfront warehouse next to Wapping Tube station is being converted into 37 loft-style apartments. The homes are priced from £1.4m.

Limehouse 

Limehouse is traffic-free and therefore fairly quiet. Two-bed flats at Canary Gateway cost from £520,000.

Limehouse Cut, the capital’s oldest canal, was created to form a shortcut between the Thames and the River Lea in Bow.

Royal Quay, on the banks of the canal, is a new scheme of 90 homes, set behind original warehouse facades. Flats feature exposed brick and high ceilings and start at £417,600.

Greenwich 

North Greenwich features a new district of 10,000 homes, a pier and its own beach and yacht club.

Greenwich Millennium Village is a collection of apartment blocks near a nature reserve and park. Buyers can find flats priced from £350,000.

Knight Dragon, a Chinese developer, is building five villages joined together by green space, squares, public art and a one-and-a-half-mile riverside promenade. New skyscrapers are under construction, with glass-clad apartments already available to buy off-plan. Prices begin at £300,000 for a studio and increase to £1.95m for penthouses.

Telegraph Works is being regenerated as part of a wider improvement of the riverside strip between the historic town centre and Greenwich Peninsula. The site dates back to the Tudor era, when it was a gunpowder store during Elizabeth I’s reign. It later became a sail and rope-making factory and then manufactured telegraph cables. Most recently, it was a tin foil factory that closed in 2013.

The complex is now being redeveloped into 256 properties within four buildings, including an 18-storey tower. Homes start at £300,000. A cruise liner terminal is also in the pipeline.

Canary Wharf 

New waterfront homes in this area include 10 Park Drive, the first residential scheme within the Canary Wharf estate. It contains 345 apartments in two linked towers that boast a sky terrace, spa and gym. Prices start at £395,000.

South Quay Plaza has 888 homes and features one of the tallest towers in Britain, a 66-storey glass-clad skyscraper with residents club, private cinema and spa on the 56th floor. Homes are priced from £490,000. Completion is expected in 2020.

Woolwich

Woolwich, in southeast London, is an upcoming area thanks to Crossrail and the growing Royal Arsenal Riverside. An ex-munitions factory, the development is being renovated into a 5,000-home residential quarter, with listed buildings being restored across the 88-acre site. Completion is set for 2030.

Woolwich is also set to become a major transport hub. New waterfront apartments have also been launched, costing from £367,500.

1 http://www.homesandproperty.co.uk/property-news/new-homes/riverside-homes-london-thousands-new-waterfront-homes-planned-seven-key-thameside-districts

Affordable Shared Ownership Flat in Hackney Valued at £1m

A shared ownership flat has been put on the market for £1m in Hackney, East London, a sign that London is becoming even more unaffordable for aspiring homeowners.

Shared ownership, provided by housing associations, is supposed to help people on low incomes get onto the property ladder by giving them the change to buy a share in a home that they can increase over time.

The buyer then also pays rent on the remainder of the property that is not mortgaged.

However, high house prices in the capital mean that even these affordable homes are too expensive.

The three-bedroom flat, pinpointed by The Guardian, is within a new award-winning development near the trendy Old Street in Hackney. It is priced at £1,025,000 with buyers offered a minimum stake of 25%.

The flat is being sold by Islington and Shoreditch Housing Association (Isha), which says priority will be given to local authority and housing association tenants, Ministry of Defence workers and those that live and work in Hackney.

However, Isha estimates that to afford a 70% mortgage on the £256,250 share and have enough money to pay rent on the remaining 75% of the property as well as a monthly service charge, buyers would need a household income large enough to pay out over £2,400 per month in housing costs.

It has been claimed that a large enough loan would not be granted to anyone with household earnings under £77,000 per year. The median salary in the borough is £31,000.

Isha insists that just three of its shared ownership properties are priced above £900,000, all of which are close to the City of London, where homes often have seven-figure prices.

It adds that all three are three-bedroom properties, which means several buyers can purchase together. Another three-bed flat in the development at a similar price is under offer.

Chief Executive of Isha, Clare Thomson, says: “We recognise that the home highlighted by The Guardian is out of reach to many of the households we prioritise to assist.

“It does still, however, meet our objective of assisting people who would otherwise not be able to purchase in that area. The proceeds from shared ownership are invested in providing low-cost rent homes in the same area.”

Developers must provide affordable housing in new projects over a certain size, by working alongside housing associations to create homes at below-market rents and for shared ownership.

Under the regulations, only households earning up to £85,000 in the capital can buy three-bed homes through the scheme.

Deputy Head of Policy at housing charity Shelter, Kate Webb, states: “It is clear that when an affordable flat costs over a million pounds, our housing crisis has plummeted to new depths.

“Shared ownership schemes are there to help people on ordinary incomes get onto the housing ladder, but as house prices soar, even a small share of these supposedly affordable homes will be pushed well out of their reach.”1

Tom Chance, the Green Party spokesperson for housing, says: “I don’t think anyone can call a small share of a luxury flat for almost £3,000 per month affordable. If local prices continue to rise and the owners buy up a bigger share of their home, it will be resold at an even more obscene price.

“It’s a broken model in a broken housing market. We need to stop throwing money at the same old ideas and try something fundamentally different like community land trusts, which fix the price to local incomes.”1 

Property prices in Hackney have surged recently, with the average price of a home surpassing £500,000 in early 2014 and increasing to £627,213 now.

The flat is situated within a new development named The Cube, which is described as “a contemporary development of stylish apartments, in a location that offers the opportunity to live London life to the full”1.

The cross-shaped building has won numerous awards for its design and appearance. A two-bed home in the development being offered through a normal sale is on the market for £1.3m, but the housing association is offering three three-bed properties at rents under £200 per week.

Thomson adds: “Isha is committed to developing within our core areas of Hackney, Islington and Waltham Forest. We were established in the 1930s to provide affordable housing in Shoreditch, which at that time was a high value area because of the commercial furniture-making interests.

“Our challenge is to provide solutions that maintain low-cost housing options, both rent and homeownership.”1

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/aug/24/affordable-shared-ownership-flat-hackney-1m

Police Called to Investigate Agency that Suddenly Closed

Published On: August 25, 2015 at 1:32 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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Police have been called after an estate and letting agent suddenly closed down.

Police Called to Investigate Agency that Suddenly Closed

Police Called to Investigate Agency that Suddenly Closed

The branch was a franchise of Enfields in Northampton.

Anyone that calls Enfields’ head office is told via a recorded message that if they are inquiring about the closure, they should contact the local branch of Your Move.

Northamptonshire Trading Standards refer any inquiries to the police, who said: “We can confirm that Northamptonshire Police has received a report of an alleged theft from a Northampton estate agents and an investigation is ongoing.”1 

Enfields currently lists nine offices plus a head office in Fareham, Hampshire, on its website. It does not name the Northampton branch, which was closed down by the firm.

The company states that it became aware of suspected “serious financial irregularities” after a matter was reported to the police.

Director of Enfields, Colin Wilton-Smith, says: “As soon as we were sure there was a problem, we informed the police and trading standards.

“The Northampton branch was not run by us but we are now sorting out the mess left behind.

“We have engaged a local estate agent [Your Move] to help any landlords and tenants who need assistance, but people can contact us if they wish.”1

Enfields’ head office has sent a letter out to landlords, saying that the franchise has closed and apologising for any inconvenience and distress caused.

One landlord claimed that the letter caused concerns regarding missing money.

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/shock-as-police-are-called-in-to-investigate-agency/

Property Firms Hit by Black Monday

Published On: August 25, 2015 at 12:31 pm

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Categories: Finance News

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Property Firms Hit by Black Monday

Property Firms Hit by Black Monday

Property portals, estate agents and property developers were all hit by yesterday’s Black Monday.

Described as a bloodbath on the stock market, yesterday saw markets crash around the world.

In the UK, almost three years of gains were destroyed. In China, yesterday’s 8.5% downfall followed a 12% decrease last week, causing uncertainty for UK estate agents over Chinese property buyers in this country.

Shares in Rightmove dropped by 5.25% and Zoopla saw falls of 7.91%.

Countrywide, the UK’s biggest estate agent, experienced a 2.28% decline, LSL of 7.74% and Savills of 6.72%.

Shares in Foxtons were down by 5.77% and house builder Barratts saw falls of 3.44%.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Martin & Co Sells The Landlord Hub Following Stock Market Float

Franchise agent Martin & Co has sold its tenancy referencing and insurance firm that was launched in 2012.

The Landlord Hub has now been sold to LetRisks, which is a merged business between two referencing firms – Let Insurance Services and PropertyRisks.

The deal is believed to have been completed on Friday 21st August for £840,000, plus clearance of £400,000 of inter-company debt.

The sale means that Martin & Co franchises can continue using The Landlord Hub for three years at a set price.

Between the two merged firms, clients include Countrywide, Leaders and Romans.

Martin & Co Sells The Landlord Hub Following Stock Market Float

Martin & Co Sells The Landlord Hub Following Stock Market Float

The Landlord Hub, based in Peterborough, originally launched with just five members of staff to serve the Martin & Co network.

By February this year, the chief executive of Martin & Co, Ian Wilson, reported that The Landlord Hub had expanded to 38 staff members, serving external customers as well as Martin & Co branches.

At the time, Wilson said: “Originally, The Landlord Hub was set up to service Martin & Co exclusively, but when we were preparing for our stock market IPO, our stockbroker told us to hive off The Hub as it was a complication to the investment story.

“Since then, it’s gone on from strength to strength as an independent business.”

Yesterday, Wilson confirmed that the deal followed Martin & Co’s floatation.

He says that it was decided at the start of 2015 to sell the business, of which he was the unpaid managing director.

In 2012, Martin & Co recruited Heidi Shackell, formerly of HomeLet, to run The Landlord Hub.

Shackell allegedly won her case for unfair dismissal against HomeLet and will now be the CEO of the merged Landlord Hub and LetRisks firm.

Wilson revealed that when originally recruiting Shackell, he had wanted to create a succession order at Martin & Co and she would have eventually succeeded him as boss.

It does not seem that this will happen, but Shackell now has her own business to operate.

Chairman of LetRisks, Philip Cook, says: “The Landlord Hub is a relatively new but fast-growing business.

“We are delighted that this merger will take us forward on the next stage of our journey and maximising the potential of the combined tenant referencing and lettings insurance business.

“This is a great opportunity for both businesses. LetRisks has invested heavily over the last year in technical infrastructure and the management team has years of experience in both the lettings and insurance sectors.

“The Landlord Hub is an innovative, fast-developing business with particular emphasis on their referencing products and customer care.

“Their partnerships with some of the biggest UK letting agencies speaks for itself and I am confident that now the two brands are under one umbrella, the future looks very bright for all of us, particularly for our clients.

“We will now quickly move forward with our plans for the future, seeking feedback from our customers to ensure that we more than meet their needs and help them to grow successfully.”1 

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/martin-co-sells-its-landlord-hub-in-wake-of-stock-market-float/

Rental Properties Let Off-Plan

Rental Properties Let Off-Plan

Rental Properties Let Off-Plan

In what appears to be a first in the rental market, flats have been let off-plan in London.

Homes are often sold off-plan, but there has not yet been a situation where the same can be said for lettings.

The flats in Poplar, East London, will not be completed until October and cannot be viewed.

However, hopeful tenants can look at the 158 apartments using a technology called Virtual Walkthrough, which allows them to see the size, dimensions and layout of the properties on their computer, phone or tablet.

Director of developer be:here – part of Willmott Dixon – Simon Chatfield, says that the technology means tenants can view the homes before they’re finished, which has led to successful applications.

So far, 60% of the flats have been let.