I came across this article on the web and thought you may be interested. I have noticed a few more properties have been sold recently and prices seem to be staying strong...
With the publication of the Sunday Times Rich List in mid-May, we turn our attention to the most expensive towns in England. So in reverse order:
10. Sevenoaks in Kent, where properties cost just under £470,000 on average and have gone up by 53 per cent over the past five years. Just half an hour from Charing Cross, surrounded by lovely villages and the Kent Weald, the only big downside is the ultra right wing politics of so many residents.
9. Alderley Edge, Cheshire, where average properties cost £481,100 and prices have jumped by 63 per cent in five years. Populated by footballers, Coronation Street actors and Manchester and Liverpool-commuting executives, prices are more than double the level of the surrounding area.
8. Harpenden, Hertfordshire, in between Luton and St Albans, with golf courses aplenty and Kings Cross within 26 minutes. Lots of green space and blue politics.
7. Brockenhurst, Hampshire, close to the sea at Buckler?s Hard, on the doorstep of the New Forest and with a fast train into Waterloo, prices are a fraction under £500,000 on average.
6. Salcombe, Devon, where prices have soared by almost 80 per cent in five years and now average over £500,000. Up to three quarters of properties are second homes, so the place is far busier in summer
than winter.
5. Lyndhurst, Hampshire, is bang in the middle of the New Forest and just 75 minutes from London by train. Property prices have more than doubled in the past five years and now exceed £515,000 on average.
4. Ascot, Berkshire, has a clutch of events during the social season, quite apart from its racing days. Inhabitants pay £525,000 on average for their homes and send their children to the many nearby private schools.
3, 2 & 1 are all in Buckinghamshire, starting with Amersham, followed by Gerrards Cross and finally Beaconsfield at number one, with average prices at £684,000, which is to say 14 times the national income. All three towns are stacked with good schools, parks and organic butchers.
Wednesday, 18 May 2011
Salcombe House Prices Stay Strong
Posted by OOdevon at Wednesday, May 18, 2011 6 comments
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