The Scotsman

Costliest neighbourh­ood revealed

Aberdeen suburb tops area price poll

- Martyn Mclaughlin

A SUBURB on the outskirts of Aberdeen has been named as Scotland’s most expensive neighbourh­ood, according to an online property search engine.

Milltimber, where the average house price is £432,431, topped the list of the highest value towns and neighbourh­oods anywhere in the country, according to Zoopla.co.uk’s annual Scottish property rich list.

The firm also highlighte­d the most expensive streets in the nation to buy property, with Edinburgh’s North Charlotte Street topping the list.

The capital address, close to the First Minister’s official residence in Charlotte Square, has an average house price of £1,791,179 over the past 12 months according to the report, some £1.6m more than the average price across Scotland as a whole.

The list placed two locations in East Lothian in second and third place respective­ly. Humbie, near Haddington, had an average house price of £388,076, while North Berwick had an average property value of £313,556.

There are now 31 streets in Scotland with an average house price over £1m – 14 of those in Edinburgh, reaffirmin­g the capital’s status as the nation’s property hot spot.

Elsewhere in the list of the most expensive streets, Caledonian Crescent on the luxury Gleneagles Golf Course, where the average property price is £1,591,927, came second while Whitehouse Terrace in Edinburgh was in third place with house prices averaging £1,520,685.

Not one address in Glasgow featured in Zoopla’s top-20 most valuable streets or neighbourh­oods, but Scotland’s biggest city took 20th place on its most expensive postcode list for G61, in the upmarket Bearsden area.

Nicholas Leeming, of Zoopla. co.uk, said: “The Scottish residentia­l property market boasts some extraordin­ary homes and while house prices on average are lower than other parts of Britain, in Scotland you get a lot more bang for your buck.

“For example, in London’s most expensive neighbourh­ood, Kensington, an area the size of an iPad will set you back over £550, while in Milltimber, Scotland’s most expensive area, the same floor space costs just £124.”

The study looks at recent sales

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( $'(&+"!, and estimates of property values. It conducts similar research across the UK, but admits that because publicly available data is less accessible in Scotland, its model is “less accurate” when applied north of the Border.

Furthermor­e, the figures are dependent on the number of properties sold in any given area or street, meaning that while there may be more expensive locales, they will feature less prominentl­y if there have been no sales in the last year.

It is the second year in a row that Milltimber, six miles west of Aberdeen, has topped Zoopla’s report. A comparison with last year even suggests house prices in have increased significan­tly from the 2011 average valuation of £407,957.

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7" &$* =!<$2 $'&#+&%, ;BA? =8)( .4B#? 4$! 9B4$AD %"$> * =!<$2;BA? $''&+* ** Zoopla’s study in 2009, helped by the fact that in the year beforehand, five householde­rs were paid a total of more than £6m from the Scottish Government and local authoritie­s as part of plans to make way for the controvers­ial Aberdeen bypass.

John MacRae, a partner with property solicitors Mackie & Dewar, and chairman of Aber- deen Solicitors’ Property Centre, said: “It’s never a surprise to people who live here that Milltimber performs so well in these kind of reports.

“In the area it covers, there is not a wide variety of housing types, and that’s reflected in the average price.

“It has lots of large detached, four or five-bedroom houses with very nice large gardens.”

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