The Jewish Chronicle

Support for homes under £500,000

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YOU CANNOT really fault members of the government for helping firsttime buyers. First there was Help To Buy. Now t her e are developmen­t zones, which are an easy first place to look for what are now considered “value” properties. There are areas such as Edgware, where developers are enthusiast­ically adopting the Mayor of London’s desire for regenerati­on. Boris Johnson’s plans for Colindale have given the green light to a raft of new apartment blocks. Galliard Homes and Neat TNQ are both building there, as is Mar City Homes.

Mar City is offering one- and twobedroom properties and one-bedroom “live/work” apartments at prices from £317,000. Its Green Point scheme won best sustainabl­e developmen­t at the London Constructi­on Awards as well as winning two silver WhatHouse awards: Best Medium House Builder and Best Brownfield Developmen­t. Mar City Homes was commended for impressive financial growth, handson approach to design and build and, most significan­tly, commitment to innovation and sustainabi­lity.

How can a new property be so

Mar City’s award-winning Green Point, from £317,000, uses modular constructi­on to improve affordabil­ity cheap? Green Point is built using modular constructi­on, where whole sections of the building can be made in a factory, brought to the site by lorry and dropped into place. However, the WhatHouse judges were keen to point out that “design and aesthetic qualities were not sacrificed on the altar of speed and efficiency of build”.

In the secondhand market locally, Preston Bennett is marketing a twodouble-bedroom,two-bathroomap­artment at Nevis Court, Loch Crescent. On the first floor of a recently constructe­d Barratt Homes developmen­t, the flat has a generous balcony and lift access. Asking price is £382,950.

The same agent is asking £399,950 for a two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment in Brunel Court, Green Lane, also in Edgware, which has a lift, video entry, residents’ gym, allocated parking and communal gardens.

In Stanmore, offers in the region of £330,000 will buy you a two-bedroom duplex apartment close to Stanmore Common. It has a reception room, open-plan modern fitted kitchen and fitted wardrobes in both bedrooms.

There are more new homes at a below-£500,000 starting price in Mill Hill. Cala’s Millbrook Park includes one- and two-bedroom apartments as well as three- and four-bedroom houses. The first phase of apartments, in Arrandene House, are priced at £339,950 to £699,950.

In the Mill Hill conservati­on area, Millbrook Park will have community facilities, including a new primary school and almost six hectares of parks and open space, with views across north London. Once known as Inglis Barracks, the former officers’ mess building has been restored and the Officers’ Mess Gardens have been completed and are now open for use.

The problem for first-time buyers is the rate of property-price increases. The average price of a home for a firsttime buyer jumped by £4,150 in June — that’s £138 a day. This is the conclusion of research by estate agent Haart. Across the UK, the average first-time buyer is now paying £166,393 for their first home. The average deposit rose to £32,518, up 3.2 per cent from the same time last year. And supply of properties fell 13.9 per cent, meaning there are now 11 buyers chasing every property in the UK, rising to 20 in the capital.

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