Ex-council
flat in central London sold for record £1.2m
Three-bed
property near Covent Garden bought for £130,000 in 1990 realises
return on investment of more than 800% for owners
Hilary Osborne
Thursday 13 August
2015 19.44 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/aug/13/ex-council-flat-in-central-london-sold-for-record-12m?CMP=share_btn_fb
A former council
flat in central London has changed hands for £1.2m in what is
thought to be a new record for an ex-local authority apartment.
The three-bedroom
property near Covent Garden has been sold by the original buyers, who
bought it from Westminster council in 1990 for £130,000 under the
right-to-buy rules introduced by Margaret Thatcher. Although it
failed to reach the initial asking price of £1.35m, the sellers are
unlikely to have been disappointed with a return on their investment
of more than 800%.
The property is not
the first ex-council flat to be marketed for more than £1m this
year. In May a two-bedroom home above Stella McCartney’s boutique
in Fulham came on to the market for £1.15m. Last year, two large
houses were sold by Southwark council for almost £2.96m and are now
back on the market for more than £3m each.
Situated in Siddons
Court, a mansion block which was once entirely owned by Westminster
council, the £1.2m flat is in a part of London popular with both
buyers and renters. The 1,118 sq ft flat boasts its own private front
door entrance, a third bedroom and an eat-in kitchen separate from
the main reception room.
The estate agency
that oversaw the sale described the area as a “fantastic location”
just behind the Royal Opera House. However, its statement also
explained why most would-be homeowners now see the centre of the
capital as out of bounds. “With central London property prices at a
premium, and with demand for properties far outstripping supply, we
weren’t surprised that this former council flat reached this
impressive price,” said Barry Marner at estate agent Barnard
Marcus.
According to the
property website Zoopla, the average asking price for a two-bedroom
home on Tavistock Street, where the flat is located, is just under
£1.2m.
Barnard Marcus said
it had been bought by an owner-occupier rather than an investor.
However, property experts say ex-council properties have become very
popular with buy-to-let investors looking for easy to maintain,
purpose built flats to let.
They have been
described as a gold mine for landlords, as rents in refurbished
properties in some parts of London have hit £400 a week, while
two-bedroom flats can command as much as £600 a week. In 2014, a
two-bedroom flat in Siddons Court was advertised for rent at £525 a
week.
Since right-to-buy
was introduced in the early 1980s more than 2m properties have been
sold off across the country. Currently, council tenants in London can
get discounts of up to £103,900 on their property if they decide to
exercise their right to buy. Under new rules being brought in by the
Conservative government the right to buy will be extended to all
housing association tenants, while councils will be forced to sell
off their most valuable stock to pay for replacement homes. Councils
in London have warned that this could lead to the sell-off of
thousands of homes in the capital.
Tracy Kellett, a
buying agent for wealthy house-seekers, said ex-council homes were of
interest to homebuyers and investors: “Any stigma is waning fast as
there’s a whole generation of people who don’t even know what a
traditional council house is or was. Investors are keen as they often
give great yields as purchase prices are lower than average.”
“Homebuyers are
caring less and less, particularly if they are on developments with
high owner-occupier ratio – the bottom line is they will get more
house for their money, a key driver in today’s high-cost housing
market.”
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