Written By Em

Em

Em Morley

Sky Pool Suspended Over Nine Elms

A 90-foot long pool that appears to float in the air is the latest addition to Nine Elms, London’s new riverside district beside the Battersea Power Station development.

The glass-encased outdoor swimming pool is suspended ten storeys high, providing a bridge between two luxury apartment blocks that have communal rooftop terraces. It is the latest architectural masterpiece at Nine Elms.

The so-called sky pool at Embassy Gardens, a 2,000-home block being built alongside the new American embassy, has been described as a world first.

Completely transparent, the pool is 90 feet long and 19 feet wide, almost ten feet deep with a water depth of around four feet. It is the brainchild of Sean Mulryan, the chairman and founder of developer Ballymore. Next month, the firm will uncover Legacy Buildings, the second phase of the scheme.

Using eight-inch thick glass, the pool seems to float in the air, resembling a huge aquarium.

The sky pool will be available to private residents, who can swim from one building to the other, enjoying stunning views over Westminster. The linked sky deck at the top of the two complexes will include a summer bar, sun loungers, a spa and an orangery.

Mulryan comments: “We set out to create places and spaces that are more than just bricks and mortar. The pool is testimony to this philosophy and gives the development a unique character.”1

Apartments go on sale in September and are priced from £602,000.

1 http://www.homesandproperty.co.uk/luxury/property/its-world-first-nine-elms-sky-pool-suspended-10-storeys-high-between-two-apartment-blocks

 

 

 

 

 

The Hidden £4.5m Home

Published On: August 22, 2015 at 4:23 pm

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If you were walking past this house, you might think it’s merely a parking space with a wooden fence behind it. But beneath this land near Hampstead Heath is a prime London property.

Through the door of the wooden panel is a family home worth £4.5m.

Invisible from the roadside, the house is built below the ground, but includes a gym, cinema and wine cellar.

The three-bedroom, three-bathroom home is so far underground that the living room has a 25ft high ceiling.

This strange property is the result of planning permission that stated a new home could only be as high as the row of garages it was replacing.

Named Langtry House after the actress Lillie Langtry, whose cousin Philip Le Breton looked after Hampstead Heath, the house has 3,500 sq. ft. of living space, despite being around eight feet high from ground level.

Hampstead boasts some of London’s most expensive homes, and this subterranean property is decorated to the highest standard.

It is now on the market through Aston Chase.

Director of the agent, Mark Pollack, says the home is “deceptively spacious” and a “breathtaking experience.”

He continues: “Langtry House is not your typical Hampstead residence.

“The house has been masterfully conceived in the rear car park of a mansion block and now all the outside world sees is a subtle, yet beautifully engineered wooden fence-like façade.

“This offers little clues as to what lies beyond and the house doesn’t fail to deliver.”

Pollack describes the interior: “Upon opening the front door, you are immediately greeted by a large glass panel that perfectly frames the view into the triple volume living room that acts as a focal point in this unique modernist home.

“While this house offers subterranean living, the spacious open plan living accommodation feels bright and airy due to the volume and clever use of glass.”

The sleeping quarters are also large, with the master bedroom including a dressing area and ensuite, and direct access onto the patio garden.

Pollack concludes: “The house certainly delivers on drama and impact, but is also a highly useable family home, offering off-street parking for three cars, two outdoor patio areas, three large bedroom suites and the all-important media room.”1

1 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/house-prices/11807991/The-invisible-4.5m-home-underground-Hampstead-Heath-house-up-for-sale.html

Tenant Believed to Have Information About Missing Landlord Spotted

Published On: August 21, 2015 at 5:33 pm

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Police investigating the disappearance of landlord Alec Warburton, of Swansea, have spotted the man – Warburton’s tenant – who they have urged to contact them.

Last week, we reported that a murder investigation has begun: /murder-investigation-regarding-missing-landlord-continues/

Warburton’s car was found at Birkenhead ferry port near Liverpool.

The police have called for his lodger, David Ellis, 40, to contact them, but now have CCTV footage of him boarding a ferry to Belfast, Northern Ireland.

Warburton, 59, has not been seen since Friday 31st July.

Ellis boarded a Stena Line Lagan ferry at 22:30 on 5th August and arrived in Belfast at 07:00 the following day.

Police believe he may have been in Dolwyddelan and Betws-y-Coed, Conwy, on the days before he travelled.

Det Supt Paul Hurley of South Wales Police, says: “Our investigation and search for Mr. Warburton and Mr. Ellis has extended from Swansea to north Wales and now to Northern Ireland, where we have deployed officers to work alongside the Police Service of Northern Ireland to carry out enquiries.

“Mr. Ellis’s whereabouts in Ireland are unknown. He may have friends, associates or family in Ireland offering him accommodation. We appeal to anyone who has seen him to come forward.

“I appeal to anyone who has seen Mr. Warburton or Mr. Ellis to contact the police. I appeal directly to Mr. Ellis to come forward as I believe that you hold the information we need to establish the circumstances of Alec Warburton’s disappearance.”1  

1 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-south-west-wales-34013736

Government to Extend Starter Homes Scheme to Rural Areas

Published On: August 21, 2015 at 4:29 pm

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Chancellor George Osborne has amended planning rules to allow starter homes to be built on rural exception sites for the first time.

Government to Extend Starter Homes Scheme to Rural Areas

Government to Extend Starter Homes Scheme to Rural Areas

Rural towns and villages in England will be able to build homes for local first time buyers thanks to the Government’s Rural Productivity Plan.

The proposal will allow local areas to select more sites for starter homes, which can be purchased at a 20% discount by first time buyers with links to the area.

Greg Clark, the Communities Secretary, explains the plan: “We’re determined to ensure anyone who works hard and aspires to own their own home has the opportunity to do so – whether they live in cities, towns or rural communities.

“But all too often, young people find themselves exiled from the place they grew up as they are forced to move away to find a home of their own.

“That’s why we’re putting power directly in the hands of rural councils to give the go-ahead for new starter homes in their area so local young first time buyers can continue to be a vital part of their communities.”1 

Osborne adds: “For too long, the British economy has been reliant on businesses based in our cities and towns. That means setting the right conditions for rural communities and businesses to thrive, investing in education and skills, improving rural infrastructure and allowing rural villages to thrive and grow.”1

1 http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/property/government-extends-starter-homes-scheme-to-rural-areas.html

 

 

Rightmove Claims its New Site is Not a Reaction to OTM

Published On: August 21, 2015 at 3:27 pm

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Rightmove claims that its new website design has been in the pipeline for a year and is not a reaction to the launch of fellow property portal, OnTheMarket (OTM).

Rightmove is due to make wholesale changes to its site, due to the fact that 60% of its visitors now browse on their mobile phone or tablet.

The new site will include improved functions, such as filters, which allow prospective buyers to select multiple criteria at once, for example, choosing both detached and semi-detached houses.

Rightmove has received feedback from agents on the new design, which has been positive so far.

Other features include a side bar map of the area being searched within and a change location and criteria bar that will move from the left-hand side of the page to the top.

The horizontal bar at the top of the page will stay in place regardless of whether the user scrolls down the page. This is similar to the feature on OTM, although Rightmove argues it came up with the concept before OTM was launched.

Housing Market Analyst at Rightmove, Miles Shipside, says: “We started this over a year ago, so in terms of when OTM was launched, this was in progress before.

“When you are a UK top ten institution, you keep moving. You have momentum. But technology is changing all the time.”1 

The new site will also include improved featured property listings and featured agent advertisements.

Featured agents and properties will also be visible on Rightmove’s mobile site and apps for the first time.

The site will automatically convert and resize its data to fit all devices.

The new design is being trialled by a small group of agents at present, in its alpha phase. The beta stage will follow, where a select number of consumers can view the new site before any small changes are made before its roll out. A date has not yet been set for this.

Rightmove’s Director for Estate and Letting Agencies, Alex Cubitt, comments: “The vast majority of agents’ feedback has been positive.

“They like the design, think it’s clean and simple. They like the featured agent feature and also featured property. They think it is much better than the current version. They feel like it will get much more engagement now it feels like a true listing.

“For the first time, this is all available on mobile; that’s the best news for agents we think. The feedback we have had so far has been very good.”1 

Head of Product Development at the portal, James Micklethwait, says: “We make a couple of hundred small changes a month. But this is a big project. We started it more than a year ago.

“The reasons are from a consumer point of view, mobile, which we now view as our core business. It is now more than 50% of our business.

“We have always had a different mobile site but we are now using the same design. Essentially it means one bit of code, which works our what device you are using and adapts for that.

“We always have an eye on the market but this is more about listening to our users.”1

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/rightmove-says-new-site-not-a-response-to-launch-of-on-the-market/

Landlords Sign Petition Against Licensing Scheme

A group of landlords in Oldham are set to present the local council with a petition opposing the town’s selective licensing scheme.

Local landlord Zahoor Ahmed says that he has a petition against selective licensing, which has been signed by 150 fellow landlords.

He asks: “Last year I was letting out a property and the tenant left without paying six months rent. Why aren’t they protecting landlords? This is unfair on a lot of people.”1

Landlords Sign Petition Against Licensing Scheme

Landlords Sign Petition Against Licensing Scheme

Oldham Council has selected 16 areas in eight districts due to low housing demand.

Licensing has already been implemented in St. Mary’s, from 1st May this year, and Hathershaw and Waterhead from 6th July.

Additional schemes are due to be launched in Hollinwood and Primrose Bank from 1st September and in Coldhurst, Alexandra and Oldham Edge from 1st January 2016.

Oldham Council will charge landlords a license fee of £490 per rental property for a five-year period.

A council spokesperson states: “Many rented properties fail to meet the required standards, which can have a terrible impact on tenants.

“This scheme aims to ensure private landlords meet satisfactory standards. Landlords need to show basic safety checks have been carried out and they have appropriate management arrangements. All the money that comes in is put straight back into the scheme.”1

Oldham Council ran a consultation on the matter, which ended on 30th September 2014.

80% of 3,672 respondents agreed that selective licensing would improve the elected areas and 85% said they believe the council should have more control over how private landlords manage their properties.

Of the 249 landlords that responded to the consultation, only 20% thought that landlord licensing would have a positive effect on the selected areas.

Councillor Dave Hibbert, Cabinet Member for Housing, Planning and Transport, says: “It is clear from the consultation that our residents, including tenants in private sector homes, back our plans. Good landlords have nothing to fear from this scheme.

“Some landlords have expressed that they think it’s wrong to target all landlords and we have some sympathy with this view. However, selective licensing treats all landlords in an area the same and creates a level playing field.”1

1 https://www.lettingagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2015/8/landlords-to-present-council-with-petition-against-licensing-scheme