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Top Tips to Improve Your Property Kerb Appeal

Improving the appearance of a property doesn’t necessarily have to be an expensive project, she says – but there are a few rules. “No DIY is better than bad DIY,” she says. “Badly painted front doors with drips running down them or dirty looking houses are a no-no. A lack of cleanliness can be very off-putting.”
1. Paint your front door. It sounds simple but this is the first thing that people are going to look at. “Go wild with colour, it’s the one place you can,” says Sarah Beeny, whose favourite door colour is currently cerise pink. Strong, bright colours in full gloss are popular at the moment but if you haven’t got the nerve, black is always a safe bet, or a flat, dark plum colour such as “Pelt”, by Farrow & Ball, says Tacina Smith of interiors shop Smiths of Kensal Green . For a contemporary look, matt, muted and washed-out colours are favoured in smart London streets.
2. Invest in quality door furniture. “Spend an extra £100 to get really good things,” Beeny says. “Cheap generally looks cheap.” Try to choose furniture in keeping with your property; heavy Victoriana door knockers and letter boxes will look ridiculous unless your home is Victorian. Priors Reclaimation specialises in period door furniture (www.priorsrec.co.uk ), as does Drummonds (www.drummonds-arch.co.uk ) For a more contemporary look go for brushed aluminium or chrome (Knobs & Knockers; www.diytools.co.uk/diy/Main/knobsandknockers.asp ) Avoid tune-playing door bells.
3. Lighting is vital, placed either side of the front door to add symmetry, or a lantern in a portico entrance, says Alex Michelin, of swanky London developers Finchatton. Don’t be afraid to try out lights in situ before you commit; if they’re too big or too ornate they can look brash. If your property is approached via a garden, light it sensitively. “Good garden lighting is unseen,” Beeny says. Hide lights in the trees or conceal them in the garden path or drive. Carolyn Trevor, an interior designer who has a long list of celebrity clients, recommends Charles Edwards for wall lanterns and lights (www.charlesedwards.com ) or Phillips and Wood (www.phillipsandwood.co.uk )
4. The approach to the front door (steps, a path and/or a driveway), should be swept of leaves, and free from rubbish. Cars, bicycles, horse boxes must be neatly parked. Alex Michelin recommends marble, sandstone or Portland stone for steps and paths, and newly painted railings. Porches can give an air of distinction but can become dumping grounds for clutter. “They can be awful if they are stuck on as an afterthought – they must be in proportion,” says Crispin Holborow of Savills.
5. Numbering or naming a house can easily go wrong. Wonky numerals, badly painted names, or plaques with pictures (such as birds, trees) do no justice to the front of a house. There’s a trend in London for shiny oversized chrome numerals or stencilled numbers, which can be ordered from Turnstyle Designs at www.turnstyledesigns.com or www.nu-line.net/nl For houses with fanlights, Carolyn Trevor suggests the number or name is acid-etched into the glass. Or for an affordable alternative, Tacina Smith recommends number stickers from www.simplystick.co.uk Holborow would steer away from putting a name plaque on a country house. “If they don’t know where you live you don’t want them there,” he says. For those who insist, names can be wrought into gateways, or inscribed tastefully on brass or slate, and screwed to the gate post or porch.
6. Windows look sad when they are dirty, so make sure yours are cleaned regularly. Rotten window frames are also unacceptable and if you’re putting in new ones, make sure they are appropriate with the design of the rest of the house. “The position of the glazing bars is massively important,” Beeny says. “And don’t feel you have to paint them white. They look great in lots of different colours from stone to dark green to black.” Bear in mind the colour of the brick/stone work before choosing a colour though. Finally, all curtain linings and blinds should match when seen from the street or driveway (try www.theblindscompany.co.uk or www.eclectic-interiors.com )
7. However small the space is, add some greenery. “You don’t need a big garden to plant a creeper, and houses look beautiful with plants trailing up them,” Beeny says. “And you can easily make window boxes yourself. Just paint a plastic planter and plant it with some draping ivy.” Landscaped beds with colourful planting and box hedges set off the front of a house; or for smaller spaces, such as either side of the front door, planters with box topiary. Remember though that some creepers are not good for brickwork as they can pull the mortar out of the pointing.
8. An impressive entrance gate is a “must have” for a country house, Holborow says. But entrances should reflect the period of the house; wrought iron electric gates are in keeping with a new-build home, while a white-painted gate with simple stone pillars is better suited to a manor. Carved owls and eagles should really only adorn the entrance pillars to stately homes and castles.
9. Spruce up a tired façade by repainting, re-pointing, or rendering over ugly brickwork. Don’t go too crazy: paint colours should be more sensible than on the front door, and in keeping with the period of the house (and the ones either side, if you live on a street). This doesn’t mean to say that they have to be the same colour (unless you are in a heritage area).
10. Don’t let the house next door ruin your kerb appeal. If your neighbours have rubbish outside their house, suggest you remove it, rather than whinging about it, Beeny says. “And if you’re trimming your hedge, ask if you can do theirs while you’re at it – 10 minutes mowing, or rubbish collecting is worth the effort.” Try to conceal their rubbish bins
(and yours) behind a hedge or a small fence. If you have to have them on show, make sure they are clean and the lids are on.

Categories: Kerb Appeal, Property, Top Tips

Property Prices Rise Again

New York Times Reports House prices rose for a third month running in July, the Nationwide Building Society said Thursday, providing further evidence that property prices may have stabilised despite low turnover.

The mortgage lender said house prices rose 1.3 percent this month, the fourth increase in five months, reducing the annual price fall to 6.2 percent, its smallest in more than a year.

Martin Gahbauer, Nationwide’s chief economist, said tight supply, pent-up demand and historically low interest rates had been enough to produce a bounce in prices despite the worst recession in decades.

“There is now a reasonable chance prices could end the year slightly higher than where they started,” he added. “Only a few months ago, such an outcome would have appeared unthinkable.”

Even if prices remain unchanged for the rest of the year, the annual rate will continue to improve due to the sharp fall in prices at the end of last year.

Gazundering and Gazumping Rates Reveal Property Market Revival

Guide to Gazumping and Gazundering

Gazumping has returned to the property market as confidence among estate agents reaches its highest level since the credit crunch began. Gazumping last hit its peak with buoyant property prices in the residential property market of the late 1980s and early 1990s when gazumping became commonplace (in England and Wales)Gazumping is possible here because a buyer’s offer is not legally binding even after acceptance of the offer by the vendor. This is because, by s.2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 and in order to prevent dishonesty, a contract for the sale of land must be in writing (a requirement of English law that dates back to the Statute of Frauds of 1677)

What Is Gazumping?
When the owner accepts the offer on a property, the buyer will usually not yet have commissioned a building survey nor will the buyer have yet had the opportunity to perform recommended legal checks. The offer to purchase is made “subject to contract” and thus, until written contracts are exchanged either party can pull out at any time. It can take as long as 10-12 weeks for formalities to be completed, and if the seller is tempted by a higher offer during this period it leaves the buyer disappointed and out-of-pocket.

Gazumping is hitting popular parts of London for the first time in months and it is now likely to strike other towns and cities where prospective buyers outnumber properties.

So is it farewell to Gazundering?
We hope so.When property prices are in decline the practice of gazumping becomes rare. The term gazundering has been coined for the opposite practice whereby the buyer waits until everybody is poised to exchange contracts before lowering the offer on the property, threatening the collapse of a whole chain of house sales waiting for the deal to go through.

Mortgage Approvals and Consumer Confidence At Highest Level This Year

Jennifer Ryan in Bloomberg.com reports that U.K. mortgage approvals rose more than economists forecast in April to the highest level in a year, underpinning demand for homes as the property-market slump shows signs of easing.

Banks granted 43,201 home loans, compared with 40,038 in March, the Bank of England said today in London. Economists predicted 41,000, according to the median of 20 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey.

House prices stopped falling in May for the first time in 20 months, according to Hometrack Ltd.’s survey of real-estate agents. A pickup in lending may lay the foundations for the property slump to recede as the Bank of England keeps its benchmark interest rate at a record low and pumps newly printed money into the economy to aid growth.

Consumer confidence in Britain has also improved. It matched the highest level in almost a year last month, GfK NOP Ltd. said on May 27.

Individuals, whose overall debts total 1.5 trillion pounds, were more willing to add to credit card borrowings in April, today’s report showed. Credit-card lending increased by 343 million pounds, outweighing a 29 million-pound drop in personal loans and overdrafts.

Foreign buyers’ bonanza as falling prices tempt canny overseas investors to the UK

Never has British property looked more appealing – for foreign buyers. They are jetting in from Switzerland to Singapore to pick up a bargain. And celebrities including actor Nicole Kidman and rapper P. Diddy are looking to capitalise on falling prices.The weak pound is a temptation to U.S. and European investors, who are making the most of exchange rates and snaring properties for 50 per cent less than a year ago.It’s tax-efficient for wealthy Europeans or Americans to base themselves in Britain, but the stumbling block has always been the exorbitant cost of housing.Americans tended to rent, but the pound has fallen so steeply against the dollar that there is greater interest in buying.Singaporeans are buying in London and prestigious university cities, as their currency has strengthened by 25 per cent against the pound in the past year.
By Zoe Dare Hall in the Daily Mail

Property Refurbishment Investment Opportunity

Notting Hill
Colville Gardens
London W11 2BB
Net saleable area: 658 sq/ft*
£ 350,000 Leasehold

The property is located close to Portobello Road and is perfect for local bars such as the Ground Floor Bar, The Electric Theatre and E&O Restaurant.
Notting Hill Gate is the nearest underground.
Offered for sale is this spacious second floor apartment in this period building and providing the opportunity to modernise throughout and create a 2 bedroom property.

Fulham lettings agents: Lettings in London SW6

Fulham is adjacent to Chelsea and extremely popular with young professional singles and families. Originally, the area was a market garden and the architecture is mostly Victorian offering a range of family houses and converted flats. Fulham is in high demand with its direct links into the City and offers easy access to West London (i.e. Hammersmith, the M4, Heathrow Airport) and to the South West via the A3.

The abundance of Montessori Schools, nurseries and Prep schools make Fulham a popular choice for many young families, add to this the fact that the area has four parks, all with children’s facilities and tennis courts. The local Hurlingham Club and Harbour Club serve more sporty residents.

Lettings in Earls Court SW5

Earls Court was at one point known as Kangaroo Alley due to the vast number of antipodeans who stayed there, however this doesn’t apply as much anymore. It still has the reputation of an area where people stay – not where they live.

In addition to this, in the late 70′s and early 80′s it became the gay centre of London. Once again, this no longer applies although the area retains a large gay presence. Overall, Earl’s Court is a somewhat seedy, fairly uninspiring place – but it does have its moments.

Property in Ealing

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Lettings in Docklands: London E1, E14 & E16

Over the past 20 years, the population of the Docklands has more than doubled and the area has become both a major business centre and an increasingly acceptable area to live. Transport links have improved significantly, with the Isle of Dogs gaining a tube connection via the Jubilee Line and the Docklands Light Railway being extended to Beckton, Lewisham, London City Airport and North Woolwich. Canary Wharf has become one of Europe’s biggest clusters of skyscrapers and direct challenge to the financial dominance of the City. Further east, the Royal Docks are finally being regenerated most prominently symbolised the ExCeL Exhibition Centre.

Although most of the old Dockland wharves and warehouses have been demolished, some have been restored and converted into flats. Most of the docks themselves have survived and are now used as marinas or watersports centres. Although large ships can – and occasionally still do – visit the old docks, all of the commercial traffic has moved down-river.

The revival of the Docklands has had major effects in run-down surrounding areas. Greenwich and Deptford are undergoing major redevelopment, chiefly as a result of the improved transport links making them more attractive to commuters.

The Docklands’ redevelopment has, however, had some less beneficial aspects. The massive property boom and consequent rise in house prices has led to friction between the new arrivals and the old Docklands communities, who have complained of being squeezed out. It has also made for some of the most striking disparities to be seen anywhere in Britain: luxury executive flats constructed alongside run-down public housing estates.

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