Style on a budget - Homes and Property
Transcription
Style on a budget - Homes and Property
Homes& Property Wednesday 13 August 2014 Bamboo The wonder wood Page 13 NEW COASTAL HOMES P4 ESTATE COTTAGES P6 HOLIDAY HOMES: NICE P12 SPOTLIGHT ON CHELMSFORD P28 First-time buyer Beata Heuman: Page 20 London’s best property search website: homesandproperty.co.uk SIMON BROWN Style on a budget 2 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Online homesandproperty.co.uk with This week: homesandproperty.co.uk news: Bucks town gets its trains back — 51 years late Back on the map: sleepy Winslow could see house prices steam ahead with plans to relaunch train services to London in 2019 that were lost when the station closed in 1968 LONDONERS searching for out-of-town homes in the commuter-and-grammar school belt will welcome the news that the old Buckinghamshire market town of Winslow is to get back the train services to London it lost in the Beeching cuts in 1968. The East West Rail Developers Consortium forecasts that Winslow is set to enjoy 20 per cent house price rises above local market movements when the new services launch in 2019. Property search Trophy buy of the week just the ticket for a Proms fan £4.5 million: if you are a BBC Proms fan with plenty of cash, this über-plush first-floor apartment at magnificent Albert Court, SW7, is the ideal pied-à-terre for concert nights — as it’s next door to the Royal Albert Hall. Your musical friends will be pea-green with envy. The twobedroom lateral space, with 24-hour concierge, showcases bespoke art and furniture pieces throughout, while the lighting, video entry and state-of-the-art audio systems are controlled from your tablet. Through Hamptons. O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/trophyken London buy of the week great for creative Crouch End get-togethers O Read Ruth Bloomfield’s full story at homesandproperty.co.uk hot homes: the cheapest London rental areas revealed Good-value location: Barking offers some of the most affordable rents in London, well below the average for the capital of £1,461 a month A NEW report reveals the average cost of renting in London is £1,461 a month. Discover the most affordable boroughs to live in, based on private rental costs over a 12-month period throughout the capital. The cheapest areas include Barking and Dagenham (£864 a month), Bexley (£889 a month), Croydon (£916 a month) and Havering (£919 a month). £500,000: creative types love Crouch End, N8, for its arts scene, organic delis, gastropubs and boutiques, green open spaces and landmark clock tower, all of which are just moments from this first-floor flat. You get wood floors throughout, two airy bedrooms with fitted wardrobes, plus a spacious reception room that’s perfect for £500,000: glorious Grade II-listed Moreton House awaits a new lease of life in the historic port town of Bideford, North Devon. The five-storey mansion covering a whopping 34,250sq ft sits in five acres of mature grounds. Its cavernous, parquet-floored rooms were most recently used as a boarding school, but the grand space could become a plush country hotel — or even earn a decent crust as a great British bake school. Through Jackson-Stops & Staff. O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/lifechangermore ESHomesAndProperty • Twitter: O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/ buyoftheweekcrouch Life changer use your loaf — open a British bake school O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk Facebook: dinner parties, with the ample dining area set next to the smart, white kitchen lit by a large window. Leafy communal grounds, private parking and a lift complete the picture. It’s for sale through KFH. Editor: Janice Morley VISIT homesandproperty.co.uk/ rules for details of our usual promotion rules. When you respond to promotions, offers or competitions, the London Evening Standard and its sister companies may contact you with relevant offers and services that may be of interest. Please give your mobile number and/or email address if you would like to receive such offers by text or email. Editorial: 020 3615 2524 Advertisement manager: Mark Wood Advertising: 020 3615 0527 Homes & Property, Northcliffe House, 2 Derry Street, Kensington, London W8 5TT. By Faye Greenslade @HomesProperty • Pinterest: @HomesProperty Win a memory foam ‘topper’ Or buy one in our online shop from £39.99 (plus £3.95 p&p) ENJOY a better night’s sleep with a new memory foam mattress topper. Simply lay the correct size of topper over your current mattress for blissful comfort at a fraction of the cost of buying a new memory foam mattress. By moulding itself to your body shape, the temperature-sensitive memory foam provides total support for your spine and joints, helping to relieve aches and pains and providing the ultimate night’s sleep. Available priced from £39.99 (plus £3.95 p&p), as a single, double, king or super king, and in three depths — 3cm, 5cm and 7.5cm. We have one mattress topper to give away, with the winner choosing a size up to the value of £139.99 (see entry details below). Alternatively, buy your topper from our online shop at homesandproperty.co.uk/shop. TO ENTER For a chance to win a memory foam topper up to the value of £139.99, visit homesandproperty.co.uk/offer before the end of September 3. Usual rules apply, visit homesandproperty.co.uk/rules for full details. 3 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 News Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with Cotswolds circus is rolling out of town É CIRCUS queen Nell Gifford, right, is selling her home. The sister of pottery designer Emma Bridgewater turned her estate at Bourton-on-the-Water in the Cotswolds into the home of Giffords Circus in 2000 and rehearses and designs her touring shows there. The garden has accommodated the “props” so far, including animals, swords and wagons, but the success of the 90-minute show means Nell and husband Toti need more space. The 14-acre estate with a twobedroom main house, barn, head office, stables and workshop, is listed with Butler Sherborn for £1.5 million and could be an ideal live/work space for creative types. By Amira Hashish Got some gossip? Tweet @amiranews Soccer coach’s cash penalty Is it on with a sole agent, Tamara? É ROY KEANE, inset, sacked in 2011 as manager of Ipswich Town Football Club, has cut £550,000 off the price of his Suffolk home, right. On Fine & Country’s books at £2.95 million, it comes with a tennis court, a swimming pool and a children’s tree house. Views of the Deben Estuary create a tranquil É JIMMY CHOO founder Tamara Mellon is selling her New York penthouse, right. The British designer, above, has put the duplex on the market for £20.1 million after buying it for £12.4 million in 2008. As the queen of impossibly glamorous sandals and stilettos, it is only fitting that Mellon has installed a grand dressing room space in the five-bedroom pad, which oozes style. With more than 7,200sq ft of interior space and 5,000sq ft of terraces that are perfect for viewing the city skyline, fashionistas are sure to fall head over heels for this sumptuous home. setting. Keane bought the pile in Woodbridge for £2 million in 2010. O See homesand property.co.uk/roy É EAMONN HOLMES and Ruth Langsford are apparently struggling to sell their Surrey mansion, above. The celebrity couple, below, who copresent ITV1’s This Morning lifestyle show, listed their Weybridge home for £3,495,000 in October. However, even after dropping the asking price to £2.95 million, the six-bedroom property hasn’t budged. There are plenty of luxurious features on offer including a master bedroom with an en suite whirlpool spa bath and his and hers basins. The terrace with a hot tub is ideal for unwinding, and there is a cinema room for chillier nights. Less than a 30-minute train journey from London Waterloo, it is a good option for commuters but seems to be slipping through the net. O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/ eamonn REX STEVE SCHOFIELD REX O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/giff Eamonn hopes to sell this morning. . . 2 4 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property New homes homesandproperty.co.uk with From £525,000: flats at Quarterdeck in Southbourne, Bournemouth, with Channel views. Call 01202 492518 SEA CHANGE From £475,000: coastguard-style flats and houses at Gara Rock, on the South West Coast Path between Salcombe and Dartmouth. Through Marchand Petit New technology and faster commuter routes are tempting Londoners to the UK coast, where architects are designing homes to suit sophisticated lifestyles, discovers David Spittles L £795,000: a five-bedroom apartment in Woolacombe, Devon. Through Taylor Underwood. Call 03301 011544 From £1.8 million: houses at Nautica Reach, next to the beach at Milford on Sea, Hampshire, Call 01202 492518 ONDONERS are moving to the coast in increasing numbers, prompting the new-build market to respond with schemes that appeal to thirtyand fortysomethings with urban tastes. These buyers are not interested in period features, high running costs, old-school technology and poor living spaces for modern family life. These are working families who are not prepared to give up the high salaries and good job opportunities available in London — which is why they are choosing locations near train stations or a motorway that offer a quick connection from the seaside to the capital. This trend is proving a shot in the arm for many coastal towns and is creating new hotspots, such as Southbourne in Dorset and Camber Sands in East Sussex, with attractive Blue Flag beaches and opportunites for sports including fashionable surfing and sand kiting. Architects are flexing their muscles, introducing ultra-modern glass houses, lofts, penthouses with wraparound terraces and hi-tech apartments with underground parking and 24-hour concierge. Wealth rippling out of London is pushing up prices, of course. There are premiums to pay for waterfront homes in particular. Research by estate agent Knight Frank shows coastal properties typically cost a whopping 56 per cent more those just a few miles inland. A new national planning policy framework puts a brake on a lot of coastal development, so resourceful builders are tracking down derelict sites, disused hotels and land with obvious eyesores, and regenerating them. From Norfolk and Suffolk on the East Anglian coast, around to yachtie Solent territory and further west to Devon and Cornwall, the coast is going designer-cool. LONDON ON SEA “The London look has certainly infiltrated seaside towns and villages,” says George Long of estate agent Savills in Poole, Dorset. “Increasingly, people want sleek modern design, with lightfilled interiors, floor-to-ceiling windows and generous outside space.” Nautica Reach, a scheme of four houses adjoining the beach at Milford on Sea, Hampshire, falls into this category. Rather than bedrooms at the top of the houses, there is an open-plan kitchen and living space, plus a terrace to capitalise on the outstanding sea views. Prices from £1.8 million. Call 01202 492518. The Kent and Sussex seaside is popular because of the quick escape from London. White Sand, close to the golden dunes of Camber Sands and the picturesque port of Rye in East Sussex, is a development of cottage-type houses, built in a mix of materials and styles to resemble a traditional fishing village, located between grasslands and the beach. Prices from £264,995. Call Ward Homes on 0844 4700 567. Brighton remains a magnet for Londoners, though its youthful vitality is not to everyone’s liking. Head out of the centre along Marine Drive and you soon arrive at Rottingdean, a former faded retirement enclave that now attracts style-conscious urbanites and young families. Azure is a new clifftop apartment scheme sitting between the beach and the rolling Sussex Downs. Prices from £650,000. Call estate agent Mishon Mackay on 01273 829300. One-off beachfront houses are also popping up. A striking 4,045sq ft modern house with a garden and swimming pool adjoining Shoreham Beach, along the coast from Brighton, has been launched with a price tag of £2 million. Call Winkworth on 01273 772175. “If you want direct and uninterrupted views of the sea, but without a price premium, try Southbourne, along the coast from Bournemouth,” says Savills’ George Long. “It’s an emerging hotspot.” Quarterdeck is an Art Decostyle apartment scheme in an unspoilt clifftop setting with views across the Channel to the Isle of Wight. Prices from £525,000. Call 01202 492518. DEVON DIVAS England’s most popular second-home district is South Hams, Devon, where one in 10 homes is registered as a second property. This area includes Salcombe, at the Kingsbridge Estuary’s mouth. Music diva Kate Bush is among the 2,000 residents in this year-round resort with fantastic sailing, sandy beaches, lively shops and restaurants. Mew Stone East is a spectacular newbuild house perched on an elevated plot with views over the estuary and National From Norfolk and Suffolk to yachtie Solent territory, East Sussex, Devon and Cornwall, the coast is newly cool 5 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 New homes Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with £1.95 million: villas (above) with two years’ free spa membership (below) at Estura, a scheme of 14 homes on the Salcombe estuary. Call 01548 844 473 Trust land. Price £2.75 million. Call 01392 423111. Gara Rock, on the South West Coast Path between Salcombe and Dartmouth, is a modest but well-located development of coastguard-style houses and flats, from £475,000. Call Marchand Petit on 01548 844473. Cornwall has been reinventing itself in recent years. The region has always enjoyed relatively good weather and now it has smart beachside flats, a trendy surf culture, foodie restaurants, boutique hotels and celeb residents. Better road links and cheap Ryanair flights from London to Newquay have made longer weekending possible. Away from expensive locations such as Rock, St Mawes and Constantine Bay, Wow factor: The Cornish Beach House, near Padstow, sleeps 10 (rent through thewowhousecompany.co.uk) a coastal village three miles from Padstow, prices are affordable for most pockets. St Agnes, North Cornwall, is worth investigating. The dramatic coastline is maintained by the National Trust, which has preserved scores of old tin and copper mines. Until a century ago, mining rivalled fishing and farming for jobs and wealth in the area. After generations of decline the local economy is recovering, with tourism the new big business. At Trevaunance Cove, part of a Unesco World Heritage Site, 10 con- temporary lodge-style, low-carbon houses are packed with eco-friendly features. For re-sales and to register for future schemes, call Living Structures on 08448 805709. Lodge-style homes are being built in the grounds of The Cornwall spa hotel close to the Eden Project and Porthpean Beach. Prices from £327,950. Call 01726 879451 '('"%"0(-(!"&0(" $'"("$&( !!! ! ! -*,"(&-)-&$-",*, (("%$0&-(""1"$$1( $'&$('"&$' ("%('1"$$1(" )1" ! $/(-*"-("(-*", ('$$'$"#$11" -,"0$("-*,"" ,'$"% $-1("0 (-("( +","(("",("'(" 1(")1"($,$1" 11 ,(("1$-0-("$-!" 1$/-*"$(0"-&/" $'"($ $/-* "$-*""."" $/-*"$$-0$%0(""&,$( 6 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Estate cottages homesandproperty.co.uk with T HE humble labourers who once lived in grace and favour cottages on England’s great estates would be astonished to learn that their simple homes are now among the rural property market’s most soughtafter residences, attracting, in some cases, seven-figure price tags. Their idyllic locations, rarity value, the quality of their architecture — not to mention the fact that many have been neglected and thus represent a A weekend home on a grand country estate offers parkland, peace and a slice of rural history, says Ruth Bloomfield £450,000: cottage in Aldsworth, Gloucestershire (homesandproperty.co.uk/chap). Local manor Lodge Park, above left, is now National Trust-owned Forget the big house, enjoy the cottage fantastic opportunity to add value — are among the reasons why estate cottages are hot property. The fact that you can often roam in glorious private acres is a big bonus. Lizzy Barran, an associate at Strutt & Parker and based in Norwich, says that when a cottage comes on to the market in an area where much of the property is owned by a great estate, competition can be fierce. “If people want to live in a particular area it might be their one chance to own rather than rent,” she says. PRETTINESS GUARANTEED £575,000: a semi-detached cottage, below, in Winterbourne Monkton in Wiltshire and once part of the Beaulieu Estate, is for sale with Carter Jonas Mark Charter, who heads up the Oxford office of Carter Jonas, believes the key advantage of estate cottages is their rural surrounds, often abutting acres of estate farmland. This protects them against development on their doorsteps as most estates are not keen on selling off large chunks of land to developers. Paul Cressy, a director of Savills, leads its rural department in the South-West. He feels estate cottages are a great buy because as a rule, grand landowners did not want their estates to be blighted by ugly hovels, so these homes enhance the big house. “They built their big houses, which were status symbols, and wanted their estates to be very picturesque. So the cottages tend to have a lot of character, and some decent architecture.” However, cottages bought direct from estates almost always need a lot of work. “They are generally dated,” agrees Charter. “If they have been occupied by staff or an old retainer, or tenanted for years, then they will generally need upgrading. They may not have central heating and they may need new kitchens and bathrooms.” On the plus side, says Barran, a doerupper is often exactly what buyers want. Buyers who take on a bit of a wreck need to be on their toes, says Cressy, because these properties almost always come with complex covenants attached. These may include perks — such as the right to roam across the estate’s parkland or moor a boat — but they will almost certainly also include clauses insisting that all major changes to a property must be approved by the estate. When properties are in terraces there will, more often than not, be clauses which ban owners from changing their windows, or even repainting their front door a new colour, in order to maintain the symmetry of the homes. “If you hold the view that an Englishman’s home is his castle, then that could be a problem,” says Cressy. If, however, you are prepared to live with a little red tape — which will, after all, stop your neighbours doing anything dreadful to their homes — there are some stunning estate cottages currently up for sale, including a lovely stone and thatch home in the village of Lower Harlestone, Northampton. Not only is it adorable, it is also pocket £245,000: a twobedroom cottage in Northampton, once part of Diana, Princess of Wales’s family estate. Through Richard Greener O homesand property.co.uk/ harls friendly, since it is on the market at £245,000 with Richard Greener estate agents. See richardgreener.co.uk. Moreover, the two-bedroom property was once part of the Spencer family’s Althorp Estate, the childhood home of Diana, Princess of Wales. The estate still owns several properties in the village, which it rents out. The New Forest is prime second home territory or, at a pinch, a commuter choice, and the Beaulieu Estate provides a scattering of estate cottages including an idyllic pair of thatched homes, now converted into a single four-bedroom, Grade II-listed property in the much sought-after village of Beaulieu. A particular advantage of the property’s former ownership is that its lovely garden backs on to farmland still owned by the estate, and unlikely ever to be marred by a wind farm. It is on the market for £1.1 million with John D Wood. See johndwood.co.uk. ESTATE COTTAGE PREMIUM Estates such as Beaulieu often own property miles away, a perfect example being a semi-detached cottage in Winterbourne Monkton, nine miles from the centre of Swindon, and so a good choice for commuters. The fourbedroom property, a Beaulieu Estate cast-off, is on the market for £575,000 with Carter Jonas. Families will love its large, wraparound garden. It is thought that the cottage was part of a major sell-off of land and property undertaken by the Beaulieu Estate in the Eighties, and the current owner has lived there for 15 years. See carterjonas.co.uk. Carter Jonas’s Mark Charter suspects that cottages like these will be snapped up, and they do tend to command a small premium. “It is like buying a little bit of English history and the countryside at an affordable price.” 7 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 homesandproperty.co.uk with Price watch Homes & Property What it costs to rent or buy in our boroughs New Homes & Property research shows you what your money will get, buying or renting in London’s boroughs, By Ruth Bloomfield T BARKING AND DAGENHAM Rent: you get plenty of space for your money in one of the capital’s cheapest boroughs, including this three-bedroom semi-detached house in Barking, below — though the commute into central London will seem long. It’s £1,450 per calendar RICHMOND UPON THAMES Rent: a two-bedroom flat in this gated scheme, above, in Hampton Hill is £1,450 a month (homes andproperty. co.uk/renthamp). ALAMY HE annual increase of 18.5 per cent in London house prices brings the average buying price to £439,719, while average monthly rent in the city is £1,461, according to government figures. We have compiled a chart showing the type of homes you can expect to get for these average prices in each of the London boroughs. The results show that if you can afford the deposit, it appears that in most areas, buyers can do better for their money than renters. We have selected three boroughs as examples here, but you can find the rest on our website. Visit homesand property.co.uk/bestinclass Historic elegance: 17th-century Church Street in Twickenham, Richmond, offers independent shops station, great shops and pubs. It’s £425,000 (homes and property.co.uk/ buyrich). Buy: this onebedroom flat, right, is half a mile from Richmond GREENWICH month. Visit homesandproperty. co.uk/rentbarking Rent: for New York style on a budget, a one-bedroom Royal Arsenal warehouse flat, right, is £1,500 a month (homes andproperty. co.uk/rentroyal). Buy: this five-bedroom end-ofterrace house, below, in Barking, has a good-size garden and off-street parking. It’s £460,000 (homesand property.co.uk/buybarking). Buy: a onebedroom flat at New Capital Quay, right, Greenwich, is £430,000 (homes and property. co.uk/buy greenwich). For best in class in all the London boroughs: Maritime treasures: Greenwich boasts the Cutty Sark Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/bestinclass 8 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Affordable homes homesandproperty.co.uk with W ITH London tenants spending 55 per cent of their income after tax on rent, according to the HomeLet Rental Index, it is no surprise that both politicians and surveyors are backing housing co-operatives as a way of providing better-value homes. These co-operatives offer members homes at low rent in properties they either build themselves or lease from landlords. Members vote on how their developments are run, they share ownership and help with property maintenance or other chores. The Co-operatives UK campaign group lists 224 London housing cooperatives on its website. Jeremy Blackburn, head of policy at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, believes more brownfield sites should be made available for co-ops to build affordable homes. “Co-operative homes have consistently been the most popular and most economically managed form of tenure,” he says. Co-operative housing should be recognised in property law, says Labour MP Jonathan Reynolds. He wants the need removed for property-owning coops to have cumbersome landlord and tenant contracts for their members. “It is now harder than ever for young people to find a home of their own and if we are to address this issue it is time to look beyond the traditional options of ownership or tenancy,” he says. SOUTH BANK HOMES COIN STREET COMMUNITY BUILDERS A London role model for co-ops is Coin Street Community Builders. This social enterprise and development trust owns and manages 13 acres of Bankside and the South Bank, including the Oxo Tower and Gabriel’s Wharf. Since buying the land from the Greater London Council in 1984 it has added amenities such as the Bernie Spain Gardens riverside park and built 215 homes, making this London’s largest site of purpose-built co-operative housing. Coin Street also plans to build a swimming pool and leisure centre using profits made from constructing homes for sale in Doon Street. Its head of housing services, Brian Trainor, says the balance of leisure, retail, residential and work spaces has contributed to the community’s success. “We were using the term ‘sustainable communities’ before almost anyone else,” he says. In addition to social £250 a month: Sanford Housing Co-operative homes and communal gardens in New Cross, with Sanford support officer Mark Langford, right, and ex-chairman Jim Noble Join a co-op and cut your rent in half Sky-high rents swallow most of salary after tax, but housing co-operatives offer great deals to young Londoners willing to shoulder a few ownership responsibilities. By Richard Warren housing, Julian Hall, spokesman for Lambeth United Housing Co-operative, says Coin Street and other co-ops “provide something else that is at a premium in society — the basis for a thriving community of committed and engaged members”. Hall says co-ops that lease properties can bring empty homes back into use, but their members need better protection against eviction by landlords. Lambeth council has evicted co-operative tenants from 120 homes it owns so that it can sell them, and plans to seize another 58 properties. The Labour-run council promises to make some of the 1,000 new social housing units it plans to build over the next four years available to housing co-operatives, but the eviction of existing tenants from homes some had lived in for nearly 40 years, and had maintained at their own expense, has shown that co-ops using other organisations’ property are vulnerable. TOP VALUE IN LEWISHAM SANFORD HOUSING CO-OPERATIVE Co-ops that own their property enjoy greater security. The Sanford Housing Co-operative in New Cross owns the homes its founders built on wasteland in 1973, and its tenants can only be London role model for housing co-ops: left, homes with a children’s playground at a Coin Street Community Builders project. The social enterprise and development trust owns and manages 13 acres of Bankside and the South Bank, where amenities it has added include Bernie Spain Gardens, right, a popular riverside park evicted for a serious breach of contract. Living in flats or shared houses, Sanford’s 125 members pay £250 rent per calendar month, inclusive of council tax and bills — half the local going rate for a private rental. Member disputes are rare, says Mark Langford, Sanford’s support officer, and to prevent fall-outs, the co-operative has a three-stage selection process of interviews and questionnaires for potential members, so it can find likeminded people. “Sanford selects people who demonstrate a good understanding of what co-ops are, and it is important those people also show a willingness to participate,” he says. Sanford accepts membership applications directly, and most co-ops either have waiting lists or take referrals from council housing waiting lists. Some co-ops, such as North Camden Housing Co-operative, renovate existing buildings. It owns 106 Victorian-era homes in and around Kentish Town. Central and local government grants are available for new housing co-operatives. Co-ops can bid for funds from the £1.25 billion Mayor of London’s affordable housing programmes, or the £3 million Community Right to Build scheme. Lenders including Tridos Bank and Ecology Building Society provide mortgages to co-ops. 12 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Homes abroad homesandproperty.co.uk with Nice and easy With ageless charm, this elegant city on the Med offers year-round value for home buyers, says Cathy Hawker Breathtaking: view from La Chèvre D’Or two Michelin-starred restaurant Try this treasure T HE French city of Nice has long held a special place in British hearts. A favourite holiday spot since the 18th century, by the turn of the 20th century it was so loved by Queen Victoria and her aristocracy that the coastal boulevard, planted with mimosa and palm trees, was named the Promenade des Anglais. Today Nice is the gateway to the Côte d’Azur, a small and elegant city by the sea with a population of only 350,000 but a mighty infrastructure. Nice airport, the second busiest in France, is four miles from the city, linked by an efficient transport network. The Italian Riviera is an hour by road, or by train passing through Menton and Monaco — meaning you can start the day with a croissant in Nice, lunch on spaghetti alle vongole in Italy and chance your hand at the Monte Carlo casino on the way home. Sitting on the gently curving Baie des Anges — the Bay of Angels — Nice is book-ended by glamorous Antibes and Cap Ferrat, with a six-mile beachfront lined with mansions and grand hotels. To the east is the port, and the narrow streets and faded pink-and-yellow flatfronted façades of the Old Town. £1,984,000: an all-white, designer three-bedroom apartment in a classic villa beside the sea at Mont Boron. Through Savills (020 7016 3740) same things — sea views, some outside space and a quiet location. Mont Boron, a residential hillside immediately south-east of the city, is a popular choice. Close to Elton John’s house, on Route Forestière, Savills is selling an all-white 1,940sq ft apartment in a classic Belle Époque villa beside the sea for £1,984,000. The three-bedroom apartment has great style. Its clean, cool, designer look is seductive, and the fittings are of the highest quality — a surprising rarity in Nice, says Balkin. Open-plan interiors feature pale wood floors, full-height antique doors, modern bathrooms, circular ceramic radiators, and a sitting room that has spectacular views from windows on three sides looking out over Nice and over to St Tropez and Corsica. Underground parking and a caretaker are included in the £240 monthly service charge. A CITY FOR ALL SEASONS “Nice is a lively, year-round city with beautiful buildings, interesting culture and museums, a long coastline and good restaurants,” says Alex Balkin of Savills. “It was part of Italy for a long time and that’s reflected in the architecture and terracotta colours.” The idea of a holiday apartment in Nice appeals to buyers from many countries, but most generally want the FIT FOR A QUEEN — VICTORIA Cimiez, north of the centre, is another fashionable area with palaces built by the Russian elite 100 years ago. The imposing Hotel Excelsior there was LOAFINGLY LOVELY FURNITURE £992,000: a four-bedroom flat in The Regina in Cimiez, a former hotel where Queen Victoria stayed. Through Savills home to Queen Victoria for a period of several months. In 1937 it was renamed The Regina and was divided into 100 apartments. The Regina is now a national monument with a grand entrance, sweeping marble staircases, and tennis courts and a pool in the flower-filled, two-acre communal grounds. A four-bedroom apartment is for sale on the fourth floor of the building through Savills for £992,000, with high ceilings and wrought-iron balconies overlooking the park. Monthly service charges are £350 and the apartment would rent for £2,400 a month. Good two-bedroom apartments on the Promenade des Anglais start from £555,000 but beware of road noise. Ten minutes from the centre in a lowlevel complex with gardens and a pool, Savills is selling a two-bedroom 700sq ft apartment with terrace and distant sea views for £278,000. O Savills: savills.com (020 7016 3740) CHECK into La Chèvre d’Or — the Golden Goat — to begin your house hunting. Thirty minutes from Nice airport on the road to Italy, this Relais & Chateaux hotel has peacefully colonised the everso-pretty village of Èze. Originally opened as a restaurant in 1953, it was regular visitor Walt Disney who persuaded the owner to launch it as a hotel. Today there are 24 luxurious rooms and 13 suites spread around the cobbled paths, and mixed in among private village homes. Walls of jasmine and bougainvillea and wide bowls of hydrangeas and roses set the tone, but it’s the views from the 10acre gardens and the four restaurants — including the two Michelin-starred Gourmet Restaurant — that mesmerise. Far below, the Mediterranean shimmers and the eagle-eyed can pick out the homes of U2 musicians Bono and The Edge in Èze-sur-Mer. “Guests come to visit Monaco or Antibes, to see the gardens around Nice or visit the Chagall and Matisse museums,” says the hospitable and charming general manager Thierry Naidu, a family man with international experience in the hotel sector. “It is a fabulous hideaway for you to enjoy good food and recharge the batteries on a beautiful stretch of the Med.” O Prices at La Chèvre d’Or start from £240 per room per night including tax. For reservations call Relais & Châteaux on 00800 2000 0002, or visit relaischateaux.com 13 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 Design Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with A SIAN architects have dubbed bamboo “green steel”, a testimony to the material’s strength and eco-credentials. It is used in the Far East for avant-garde houses and bridges, while in Britain we are seeing a new wave of bamboo products, from small bowls to flooring and even staircases, which exploit its strength, lightness and flexibility. Fully sustainable, bamboo is one of the fastest-growing plants on the planet and relatively inexpensive as a raw material. It has a natural finish that is more pale and interesting than rich and grainy. However, new technologies can apply bold coats of colour. “Spun bamboo” is an artisan technique, used by Habitat and others, which creates a slightly uneven surface texture that can be finished in a glossy colour. “It’s a great material to work with and offers an alternative to the machine-made perfection of spun metals or wood,” says Habitat lighting buyer Ros Humphries. Both Habitat and Futon Company promise more bamboo products for the autumn. BAMBOO BIKES Blackstar bikes are designed in Holland and made in Ghana using locally sourced bamboo. Priced £700. Men’s and women’s designs available. Visit dutchdesignonly.com ▼ The Habitat Popp green bamboo table lamp, £35, stands 40cm high. Available from habitat.co.uk Wam ba Wa bamboo! amb mbo oo!! By Barbara Chandler ▲ This bamboo wardrobe folds almost flat when not in use, for easy storage and transport. Priced £54.95. Visit futoncompany.co.uk ◄ Made from bamboo strips bent into semicircles, this chair by Dutch design duo Tejo Remy and René Veenhuizen costs £2,226 at dutchdesignonly.com EeStairs makes staircases to order using bamboo as the primary material. The hardwearing nature of bamboo makes it a good replacement for steel and concrete for treads, risers and strings. Visit eestairs. com ► Stacking bamboo bowls lacquered with coloured polyurethane are £30 for large (28cm diameter by 11cm high), £12.50 for small (15cm x 7.5cm) and £10 for mini (11.5cm x 6.5cm). From greentulip. co.uk # $ !$ .3 %,%, /- /22 &) "%% , * ,,% . )) % %% * /- &( " % * % &/+& &( " * , () "&21 % ,* , 0'&3)/'.0'01 19 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 Design Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with Eastern seaboard chic: Lexington Company dinnerware ranges from £10 for mugs to £98 for a dinner plate set T HIS is the Hamptons season, when the rich and famous flock to their Gatsby-style mansions along the south shore of Long Island in New York State. Singer Jennifer Lopez recently hosted her birthday party there, with the Kardashian sisters on her star-studded guest list, while the Clintons are holidaying this week close to movie mogul Harvey Weinstein’s £10 million retreat in Amagansett, one of the hamlets and villages that make up the Hamptons. The area has some of the most expensive homes in America. This is also the holiday haunt of choice for New York owners and renters seeking seriously chic summer style. Long Island has a look that’s all its own — fresh, classy, but relaxed. Kitting out a space with a limited colour scheme is a bold move but it works. Shades of red, white and Clockwise from left: a Lexington room with Seaside (£49), Trademark (£69) and Stonewashed (£35) cushions (lexington company.com); American Freshman cushions (£18-£25.20), throw (£49.50) and bedding (£54), all at amazon.co.uk; John Lewis tableware (from £4.50 to £72) at johnlewis.com The he e Hamptons Ha amp mpt pton pto ons look look Give your home that cool coastal chic, says Amira Hashish. From J-Lo and the Kardashians to the Hollywood studio set, A-listers are decamping to their Long Island holiday mansions Below: J-Lo and her Hamptons party home Blue would make a statement. For a more sumptuous, indoor take on the look, Alma the leather specialist’s East Coast-inspired Equestrian chair (£6,950, alma1938.com) is made and upholstered by hand in Whitechapel. Drape it with a blue or beige-and-white striped Ola throw from Adventino (£75, adventino. co.uk) and swap the check rug for Flock’s new natural Gaia rugs (£295 a square metre, flock-living.com), made with Kesav fibre. In the bedroom, team GETTY direct.com) merges the indoors and outdoors while adding instant luxe to a spacious terrace or conservatory. Dress it with American Freshman cushions (£18-£25.20) and a throw (£49.50), both from amazon.co.uk. Kitsch fans may opt for the Harmony wooden swing seat from Sitting Spiritually. Handmade to order in certified pine and painted in any Farrow & Ball colour, it costs from £1,259 (sittingspiritually.co.uk). Rectory Red or Pitch SPLASH blue are staples for a true slice of the East Coast. Mix them with natural materials, stripes and checks. Kristina Lindhe, founder of homeware and clothing brand Lexington Company, says: “In the Hamptons, beauty is often simple and uncomplicated with premium textures. I am from Sweden but the Hamptons feels like home. In the past, there were many Swedish settlers on the East Coast of America, so it is also no wonder that this look has elements of Scandinavian design.” Lexington Company interiors are created with key destinations, landmarks and features in mind — white picket fencing stretching along sandy beaches; Cape Cod and Martha’s Vineyard. “New England is more than a location, it is a lifestyle,” adds Lindhe. “It stands for something positive — light, fresh and natural.” Scatter Lexington cushions (lexingtoncompany.com) such as Seaside (£49), Trademark (£69) and Stonewashed (£35) on a two-seater New England outdoor sofa (£699, okadirect. com) for a nautical look that works well in the hallway, living room or terrace. Place Laura Ashley’s check linen cotton and wool mix rug underneath (£100 at lauraashley.com). An East Hampton double sunbed from Oka (£1,365, oka- Below: Alma’s East Coastinspired Equestrian chair (£6,950, alma1938.com) and a Heart of House Brixham round glass rope lantern from Argos (£19.99, argos.co.uk) Vi-Spring’s brushed cotton linen Arc headboard in Scarlet or Sky (from £1,095, vispring.co.uk) with Ikea bedlinen — red-and-white check Emmie Ruta, and blue, white and grey Kustruta are both £35 for a quilt cover and four pillowcases (ikea.com). Keep walls subtle and slick with Dulux Desert Wind matt paint (£25.69 for 2.5 litres) from the Light and Space range, with Pure Brilliant White in gloss (£19.99 for 2.5 litres) for doors and skirting boards and in matt (£13.99 for 2.5 litres) for ceilings (dulux.co.uk). These shades work well with Hayward wood venetian blinds (from £92) or pink roller blinds (£69), from Hillarys (hillarys.co.uk). MAKE IT MINIMALIST Accessories must be kept to a minimum for that uncluttered, stripped-back aesthetic. Heart of House’s Brixham round glass rope lantern (£19.99, argos. co.uk) is a good budget lighting option. An Eichholtz Anchor maritime table lamp (£215), Delray tray (£109) or Nelson wine cooler (£200) from luxdeco. com are smart additions. Also check out tan leather door handles (from £124.50, turnstyledesigns.com) for an opulent touch. Nod to the theme with a Westhampton Beach poster (£89.99) or splash out on a Vogue July 1954 print (£599.99), both from art.co.uk. Keep to the coastal chic mood with New England tableware from John Lewis (johnlewis.com). From a striped tablecloth (£28-£32) to a striking blue tumbler (£4.50), the collection is ideal for family dinners, barbecues or cocktail parties — all essential ingredients for the sociable Hamptons lifestyle. 20 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property My home Bright idea: mirrors are used to reflect light through the flat homesandproperty Finishing touch: an inexpensive Glendevon kitchen with Chloe Alberry brass handles MINE BY DESIGN Like all first-home owners, Beata Heuman had little money left over to do up her small flat — but she had plenty of good ideas, discovers Judith Wilson Detail counts: interior designer Beata Heuman at her pretty flat Photographs: Simon Brown F IRST-TIME buyer and interior designer Beata Heuman has done up her Earls Court flat on a budget. The secret, she says, lies in customising — from artwork to furniture: “The process doesn’t cost much more and your home looks unique.” Swedish-born Heuman spent eight years working with Nicky Haslam at NH Design and “learned everything on the job”. Now she has a fledging interior design practice. “My clients enjoy my open-minded approach,” she says, listing two exciting London projects and a Swedish villa as ongoing work. “I like to create one-off fabrics and wallpapers and get them printed, so there’s always an original element.” As a showcase for her design flair, her own home is full of creative ideas. Her primary challenge was a difficult layout. As a designer, she knew it was important to invest in building work, so the wall between the kitchen and a spare bedroom was removed. “Now the openplan area feels fluid with a feeling of space into the walk-through sitting room — however tiny,” she says. She cleverly compensated for the lack of cupboards with concealed storage tucked within a dropped ceiling, a utility cupboard inside a structural column and tall bookshelves. “The investment in built-in joinery was minimal,” she says. The flat is small, so it was important to use continuity with finishes. She replaced mismatched flooring with engineered boards, and picked key upholstery and curtain fabrics in large-scale prints, but in soft toning shades on natural linens. “Less is more when it comes to colour,” she adds. And while the kitchen/dining room has wheat-grey walls, a pretty shade that changes from morning to evening, Farrow & Ball’s Pavilion Gray in the sitting room gives a sophisticated evening mood. “The bedroom ceiling is low, so Farrow & Ball’s Lulworth Blue makes it seem higher, while creating a focal point.” Heuman loved the challenge of her tight budget. “I identified areas where I could spend and areas where I could save,” she explains, adding that she does the same for clients. She invested in quality fixed surfaces — a marble kitchen worktop and a stone bathroom floor — and chic soft furnishings. “A good curtain-maker is worth the investment, because curtains add height and drama.” But she saved on budget bathroom fittings and inexpensive furniture — such as the mismatched dining chairs, bought in Portobello market at £15 apiece — as well as doing most of the artwork herself. “Everything makes a difference in a small space,” says Heuman, who advises: “Look for special versions of everyday things. If it has to stay on the work surface, I even decant green washing-up liquid into a pretty glass bottle.” O You can read the full version of this article in the September issue of House & Garden, out now. Storage is key: when Heuman knocked down the wall between the kitchen and the spare bedroom, she created a slim utility cupboard behind the supporting column. She designed the stool — which hides more storage — in Shutter Stripe, from the Nicky Haslam collection at Turnell & Gigon EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 y.co.uk with 21 My home Homes & Property One-off: the L-shape sofa was custom-made to fit the Earls Court flat’s sitting room Best-dressed bed: mixed textures and patterns, with a Mufti mirror as “headboard” 24 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Outdoors homesandproperty.co.uk with Make two spaces work together Cloistered Moorish gardens inspire an outside space that is visible from every room at a stunning modern London home. By Pattie Barron Above left: owner Judy Gibbons with her dog, Charlie, in the tranquil garden she can enjoy through the year, whether indoors or outside Left: separated from the house by a decked walkway, box-edged beds are planted en masse with long-flowering hydrangea Annabelle In the cloisters: a west-facing loggia, left, at the far end of the garden is clad with grapevines and makes the perfect quiet retreat Right: designer John Sallis Chandler laid out the garden in the identical grid pattern as that of the house Far right: the glass pavilion, attached to the house at right angles into the garden, leads out on to tree ferns Photographs: Clive Nichols T HE chief advantage of living in a house with glass walls is that you are able to enjoy the garden for 365 days of the year, so that garden had better be worth looking at. The glorious green space that connects so seamlessly with The Glasshouse, a stunning modern building set among mature trees in the heart of historic Petersham, does not disappoint. “I love the garden — it’s very peaceful and tranquil. If the weather’s fine, we have breakfast, lunch and supper out on the terrace, but because of the enormous windows, you don’t need to actually go out to feel you are eating outside,” says Judy Gibbons, owner of The Glasshouse, which was designed eight years ago by architect Sir Terry Farrell, and is part of a trio of iconic glass homes he designed in this secluded Richmond enclave. “My last house was an 1854 Victorian house and the garden there was very different. Here, you are very connected to the garden. In fact, you are surrounded by it.” She hired local landscape architect John Sallis Chandler, who designed the garden at her previous Richmond Hill home, to create an outside space worthy of the award-winning house, in which every room has sliding glass walls looking out on to it. A double-height glass pavilion, the perfect space for entertaining, sits at right angles to the main building, within the garden. To the right designer, the space is a gift, and Sallis Chandler was clearly the right designer. Unexpectedly, he looked not to the future but to the cloistered gardens of the past, where, like The Glasshouse, all the rooms faced the outside space, which is enclosed. Farrell designed the three houses so that the back wall of each provides a high, northfacing wall for the next, maximising on space and providing privacy without sacrificing light. “Though the house is contemporary, our approach to the design wasn’t,” says Sallis Chandler. “It has echoes of a more formal landscape, and is influenced by cloister designs of the Moorish gardens which had a circular route around the perimeter, shaded niches and areas in the sun, and calmness from a restricted use of colour.” The result is an open, rectangular lawn surrounded by paved limestone 25 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 Outdoors Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with walkways and a large limestone terrace for dining, between the lawn and pavilion. There is a strong, geometric structure of clipped, evergreen box, bay and yew. Six low box walls set on either long side of the lawn each hold a mass of pale mint green Hydrangea Annabelle, bringing seasonality to the garden, as well as a white-stemmed Himalayan birch that echoes the silver birches of the surrounding rural landscape. Against the far white wall, blocks of clipped yew flank potted hardy palms, and the wall itself is decorated with fan-trained Morello cherries, chosen for their ability to thrive in the shady aspect. A series of conical standard bay trees creates an imposing avenue between wall and lawn. In the tradition of the ancient Moorish gardens, a simple grapevine-clad cedarwood loggia provides an intimate shelter at the west-facing end of the garden, with fan-trained figs making striking tracery against the white wall behind. A HARDWOOD deck, set at inter vals with potted Mediterranean fan palms, runs right along the length of the house, effectively blurring the boundaries of interior and exterior. The real key, though, that has made the garden in complete sync with the house, is that Sallis Chandler took the grid design of the building and imposed it on the landscape outside, so that each section and sightline, including the six equidistant white-stemmed Above: Himalayan birch trees frame the double-height pavilion in the garden of The Glasshouse, Petersham birches in the lawn, replicates the architectural framework of the interior. Gibbons’s favourite place in the garden is the sunny loggia, sitting on the Lutyens bench, among the fig trees. From here, there is a sightline right down the garden, beyond the terrace and through the glass pavilion walls to a more private space with a very different feeling. This is part of the garden, where, at odds with the rest of the formal planting, nature is in control. At its heart is a mossy, black-lined pebble pool. On one side is a bank of sculptural, stark white arum lilies; on the other side, a carpet of jet-black lilyturf grass. What makes this area hugely atmospheric, however, are primeval tree ferns growing at random through platforms of shrubby honeysuckle, displaying striking lime-green canopies that remain in full frond through the year, thanks to the microclimate afforded by the native trees beyond the garden. In the centre of the pool, a bowl of perpetually bubbling water, set precisely on the axis of the two sightlines from reception room and loggia, creates concentric ripples, and represents, says Sallis Chandler, the very source of the garden from which everything within emanates. O To commission John Sallis Chandler, visit sallischandler.co.uk (020 8549 5103) 28 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Property searching A WARDED city status and with its lovely parish church, St Mary the Virgin, now a cathedral, the Essex town of Chelmsford’s recognition in 2012 as a major employment and commuter destination appears to have put a lasting spring in its step. A £7 million revamp of the High Street is in the pipeline. John Lewis is set to open in 2016, in a new city centre shopping area that will include a public square overlooking the River Can, while 3,600 new homes are planned around Beaulieu Park on the north-eastern edge of town, where there will also be a new train station. There are new city centre flats around the existing Chelmsford station, along the river and at the Essex County Cricket Club ground, while opposite the station the redevelopment of the former Anglia Ruskin University campus is opening new walkways to the High Street. Chelmsford sits north-east of London close to the A12, the old Roman road from London to Colchester, and is roughly halfway — 35 miles — between the two. WHAT THERE IS TO BUY The city centre has mainly Victorian and Edwardian homes of varying sizes. A detached Victorian or Edwardian house in the best areas now easily tops £1 million, while a semi-detached house will cost between £650,000 and £750,000. In the popular Moulsham area of the city centre, smaller Victorian terrace houses go for £300,000-£400,000. Chelmsford has been expanding since the Seventies, with new settlements on the periphery such as Chelmer Village, Chancellor Park and Beaulieu Park. Houses in Beaulieu Park, the most popular of these three areas, can command £1 million. There are period houses to be had in Chelmsford’s surrounding villages of Writtle, Danbury, Little Baddow and Galleywood. The most expensive house for sale now in Chelmsford city itself is a five-bedroom detached Victorian property in Springfield Road, at £1.4 million (see homesand property.co.uk/chelspring). The most expensive rural house has six bedrooms and an indoor swimming pool, in Sandford Mill Road on the edge of Chelmsford near Chelmer Village. It’s on the market for £1,345,000 (homesandproperty. co.uk/chelsand). The most homesandproperty.co.uk with Firmly on the commuter map — and lapping up the buzz of Essex city status Spotlight Chelmsford Get the best of old and new, with a £7m retail revamp, thousands of homes and Crossrail set to join solid period houses and respected grammar schools. By Anthea Masey expensive modern house is in Seven Ash Green, with five bedrooms, for sale at £800,000 (homesand property.co.uk/seven). The most expensive house for sale in Beaulieu Park is a four-bedroom Georgian-style home in Beaulieu Boulevard, at £575,000 (homesand property.co.uk/beau), while a semidetached Victorian cottage in Hall Street in Old Moulsham is £300,000 (homesandproperty.co.uk/moul). The most expensive flat is a twobedroom penthouse in a modern development overlooking the River Chelmer in Bond Street, for sale for £475,000 (homesandproperty.co. uk/chelbond). The area attracts: the two grammar schools are a big draw — families are increasingly looking for city centre houses within walking distance of the schools, the high street and the station. House prices in the centre of Chelmsford are only slightly above the autumn 2007 peak, so families moving in from Hackney, for example, are getting a lot more for their money in Chelmsford. Staying power: some families make one last move to the Suffolk or Norfolk countryside once their children have left for university. Up and coming: the planned new railway station at Boreham will increase the attractiveness of Beaulieu Park and the north-eastern corner of Chelmsford. Nearby Shenfield is also going to benefit from the arrival of Crossrail, which from 2019 will give commuters easy access to the West End with a 45-minute journey to Tottenham Court Road. SHOPS AND RESTAURANTS Busy Chelmsford High Street has a Debenhams and The Meadows and High Chelmer shopping centres. There is a Friday and Saturday outdoor market along the High Street and a covered market with more than 80 stalls. Lower and mid-market brands predominate with branches of Primark, New Look, River Island and Topshop. The planned £7 million upgrade of the shopping street is much needed. It is looking tired, and there has been little improvement since it was pedestrianised in 1991. The Co-operative retail movement is still strong here, and Chelmsford Star Co-op owns the Quadrant department store. There are independent shops off the main street, in Baddow Road where the Zagger boutiques cater for the labelconscious, and in Moulsham Street, with its concentration of pubs and The Farmshop and the Essex Cider Shop catering for local foodies. New London Road has Just Imagine, a children’s bookshop and specialist To find a home in Chelmsford, visit homesandproperty.co.uk/chelmsford For more about Chelmsford, visit homesandproperty.co.uk/spotlightchelmsford £270,000 £1,345,000 £800,000 £575,000 A WELL-PROPORTIONED three-bedroom family home in the popular Springfield area with excellent schools and transport links (Haart). O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/spring AN EXTENDED six-bedroom Chelmer Village cottage with indoor swimming pool, landscaped gardens and a private fishing lake (Beresfords) O homesandproperty.co.uk/chelmervillage A DETACHED four-bedroom house in Cow Watering Lane, just outside Writtle, with a large garden and 150-yard private driveway. Through Abbotts. O See homesandproperty.co.uk/writ A FAMILY home with four bedrooms and three reception rooms in Beaulieu Boulevard, Beaulieu Park. Through Beresfords. O homesandproperty.co.uk/beaulieub 29 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 Property searching Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with CHECK THE STATS ■WHAT HOMES COST BUYING IN CHELMSFORD (Average prices) One-bedroom flat £145,000 Two-bedroom flat £201,000 Two-bedroom house £253,000 Three-bedroom house £370,000 Four-bedroom house £532,000 Source: Zoopla RENTING IN CHELMSFORD (Average rates) One-bedroom flat £648 a month Two-bedroom flat £892 a month Two-bedroom house £889 a month Three-bedroom house £1,074 a month Four-bedroom house £1,514 a month Source: Zoopla GO ONLINE FOR MORE O The best schools O The best shops and restaurants O The latest housing developments O How to understand the postcodes O Smart maps to plot your property search O The lowdown on Chelmsford’s rental scene For all this and more, visit homesand property.co.uk/ spotlightchelmsford HAVE YOUR SAY CHELMSFORD literacy resource and training centre, plus a café, and a store for interior accessories and jewellery. In the High Street, a sign says Jamie Oliver is coming home to Essex. The celebrity chef is set to open a branch of his Jamie’s Italian restaurant chain in the autumn, near what will become the new retail quarter between Bond Street and the river, with the new John Lewis in 2016. The city centre restaurant scene is dominated by chains such as Café Rouge, Prezzo and Giraffe but interesting gastropubs and restaurants in local villages include the Lion Inn at Boreham, the Blue Strawberry Bistrot at Hatfield Peverel TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE and Grahams on the Green in Writtle. There is much excitement about the imminent arrival of an Albert Roux restaurant in nearby Brentwood. OPEN SPACE There are lovely walks to be had along the Rivers Can and Chelmer, and the Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation. The interconnected Central Park, Bell Meadow and Blue Pasture are popular town centre riverside parks. The park at Hylands House, a poplar wedding venue, was designed by Humphry Repton and has an adventure castle playground and pleasure garden, with a café, gift shop and artists’ studios at the Stables Visitor Centre. LEISURE AND THE ARTS The Chelmsford City Theatres in Fairfield Road has a theatre offering drama, comedy and music, plus a cinema. There is an Odeon multiplex in The Meadows shopping centre. The Victorian mansion and modern extension in Oaklands Park houses the Chelmsford Museum and Essex Regiment Museum. Chelmsford Golf Club is in Widford Road, and councilowned Riverside Ice & Leisure Centre in Victoria Road has three swimming pools and an ice rink. WHAT does Chelmsford have in common with this spot in North Wales? Find the answer at homesand property.co.uk/spotlightchelmsford Travel: Chelmsford sits close to the A12 between Colchester and London with access to the M25. Trains into Liverpool Street take 32-40 minutes and an annual season ticket is £3,640. Council: Chelmsford district council is Tory controlled. Band D council tax in the city is £1,488.06. Exciting times: clockwise from main picture; Chelmsford’s shopping area is getting a £7 million revamp; the clock tower at the former Britvic soft drinks factory has been a local landmark for 60 years and will be preserved, though the plant closed in March; historic Hylands House wedding venue, with parklands by Humphry Repton; Bell Meadow riverside park; Tanya Ware serves a customer at Brownbread artisan market stall, which sells locally baked loaves and cakes Exciting news: John Lewis is coming @Nichola_Monroe best family space in Chelmsford is Hylands Park — children’s play area, acres of dogwalking space and a lovely café @Nichola_Monroe exciting news for Chelmsford — they’re building a Waitrose and a large John Lewis @johndwoodandco we would recommend the Zagger fashion shops in #chelmsford in Baddow Road zagger.co.uk/zagger-stores/ @johndwoodandco ... and Olio (olio-italian-chelmsford.co.uk) which has consistently been #Chelmsford ‘s best Italian restaurant. @DannyUK best bar for nightlife — @ctznbar, best pub is @fleecepub, best local blog is (obviously) DannyUK.com #Chelmsford Photographs:: Graham Hussey NEXT WEEK: Barking. Do you live there? Tell us what you think @HomesProperty 30 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Ask the expert homesandproperty.co.uk with The serious saga of the damp house Q Q A Fiona McNulty WHAT’S YOUR PROBLEM? OUR LAWYER ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS MY fiancé and I were trying to buy a house but had to pull out because our survey revealed significant damp issues and the seller would not reduce the asking price or contribute to the cost of the work to sort out the problem. We were about to exchange contracts when we withdrew. Now, not only have we had to pay for the survey but our solicitor has billed us. We thought legal fees were not payable if we did not buy. A SOME solicitors do not charge a fee if a purchase fails to complete, although they will charge for disbursements incurred, such as search fees. You need to check what you agreed with your solicitor at the outset. Once you told him you wished him to act for you in connection with your purchase, he would have sent you a letter of engagement and would have confirmed his terms of business. You would have been asked to sign and return a copy of the letter of engagement to confirm your instructions. Your solicitor should have provided you with an estimate of his fees and if he did not intend to charge if the purchase did not complete, he would have informed you of that fact. Solicitors are under a duty to keep their clients informed and updated about costs, and overcharging a client can amount to professional misconduct. You withdrew at the stage when you were about to exchange contracts and so your solicitor would have carried out a large part of the legal work by then. Accordingly, you may very well be charged 70-80 per cent of the fees you were quoted, as the solicitor will charge you for the work he did up to the date you withdrew. Ask him to inform the seller’s solicitor about any searches you have had done which could be used by another buyer, in the hope that you may be able to recoup some of your search costs. IF YOU have a question for Fiona McNulty, please email legalsolutions@ standard.co.uk or write to Legal Solutions, Homes & Property, London Evening Standard, 2 Derry Street, W8 5EE. We regret that questions cannot be answered individually but we will try to feature them here. Fiona McNulty is a partner in the residential property, farms and estates team at Withy King LLP (withyking.co.uk). More legal Q&As Visit: homesand property.co.uk MY WIFE and I were married 30 years. She left me and I have since discovered that she was having an affair for seven years with my best friend. The divorce was a couple of years ago and we went our separate ways. We had no children. We did not use divorce lawyers and there was no financial settlement or court order. I have done very well financially recently as I have sold my business and inherited money from my father. Can my ex-wife claim anything from me? I’d be very upset if she could. IN PRINCIPLE your wife can pursue claims for income and capital unless she has since remarried, in which case her entitlement is automatically extinguished. Assuming she has not remarried the chances are that her behaviour will not be relevant, if and when the judge considers her application, should she make one. This is because it is only in exceptional circumstances that conduct is considered, and hers is unlikely to be relevant. One point that may be of importance is what is called “post-separation accrual”. You may be able to argue that any assets acquired long after you separated should be ringfenced from any ultimate distribution — but remember that the object of the exercise, so far as the court is concerned, is to achieve a fair solution. Obviously, you should not take any action that will stir up a hornet’s nest but if your ex-wife approaches you in any way about these matters, it is essential that you obtain independent legal advice from an appropriately accredited resolution specialist. O These answers can only be a very brief commentary on the issues raised and should not be relied on as legal advice. No liability is accepted for such reliance. If you have similar issues, you should obtain advice from a solicitor. 32 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Inside story homesandproperty.co.uk with A house-hunting fish, and a pigeon that turns up its beak at a £3m flat MONDAY With our Wapping office located between the City and Canary Wharf, about half of our buyers and sellers are bankers. We are seeing a lot of French ones at the moment, probably because they are taxed so heavily back home. One comes into the office today who is typical of this type of buyer. He is not really looking to set up a permanent home in London, so he wants the aspirational two-bedroom flat with views of Tower Bridge in the distance, for about £1 million to £1.2 million. Bankers , of course, can be aggressive negotiators and we get them on both sides of the deal, as buyer and seller, and both want to maximise value. Another drops in this afternoon and he has a budget of £700,000. Properties at this level are selling within a week. His next move will probably be a family house in Blackheath or Islington. Around here we retain families with babies or toddlers, but after that they are off looking for schools. It means, Wharf. Their furniture won’t fit through the doors, so they have had to hire a boat to shift their stuff through the loading bay doors. THURSDAY We complete today on a property which the buyer, from the Far East, has never viewed. He used to rent a studio flat in the same building 17 years ago, has done very well for himself in the meantime, and wanted to buy there, so he looked at the floorplan of this apartment and bought it. It was a weird one for us as we had no idea who he was. We Googled him, but he had quite a generic name so we ended up asking the porter, who has worked at the building for 20 years. Amazingly, he remembered the man. We still haven’t met the buyer ourselves. Diary of an estate agent FRIDAY though, that August is a good month for us as the local population doesn’t disappear during the school holidays. TUESDAY I fear one of our local celebrities, a wellknown TV presenter, will think I am stalking him. He’s just walked past the office with his dog, and I also saw him at the weekend on the south coast, as he owns a house near my beach hut. He lives in Pier Head, a beautiful Georgian riverfront square that is one of Wapping’s most sought-after addresses. These used to be dockmasters’ houses, so the square doesn’t look like most people’s typical image of Wapping. The houses sell for up to £3 million and we have a two-bedroom flat under offer there for £1.45 million. Riverfront warehouse conversions are also popular. They are our easy-to-shift core market, as demand always outstrips supply. It’s all about views. Everyone wants West Wapping for the views of Tower Bridge. Within half a mile, values can change from £1,750 per square foot and more, to £850 further east. WEDNESDAY A lady who owns a house in Cinnamon Street is selling after 23 years. She is the only person who has ever lived in the property. The thing is, she is leaving her goldfish behind and has asked us whether we can help to find a new home for it. With the schools on holiday, I am stuck. I also hear from a client who has just bought a riverfront house at Olivers I open up the £3.15 million show flat at Tower View apartments, next to Tower Bridge, to show to a prospective buyer, and I have a stand-off with a pigeon. The flat has been kitted out spectacularly and has perfect views of the bridge. However, this pigeon is perched on the balcony railing and threatens to ruin the whole thing if he flies through the open bi-fold doors and leaves his mark on the exquisite sofas. I think he senses my panic though, and flies away. But while the pigeon doesn’t go for the flat, neither does the buyer. O Lee O’Neill is a partner and sales manager at Cluttons in Wapping (020 7488 4858). 34 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Letting on A As landlords go, I am a remote control freak £1,600 A MONTH In Buckleigh Road, Streatham Common, SW16, Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward has this very pleasant two-bedroom garden flat close to the common available to rent. O Visit homes andproperty. co.uk/rentbuck You can pay an agent to handle your distant rental flat, but Victoria Whitlock prefers to keep the cash and rely on her trusty mobile The accidental landlord reason why landlords pay agents to manage their properties, but I have found this is no guarantee work will be carried out satisfactorily. Managing agents have preferred tradesmen to carry out any repairs, which does save landlords a lot of hassle, but they don’t necessarily employ the most reliable people and they don’t usually inspect any work carried out. When a management company took care of one of my properties, an electrician who replaced two light fittings left large holes in the wall, one of the new lights was loose and the other was wonky. The tenant didn’t complain, she was just happy they worked, so I didn’t discover the botched job until long after the electrician had been paid. Rather than paying an agent an annual fee to manage her rental, my friend is thinking of using a pay-asyou-go property management company, such as mycaretaker.co.uk which offers landlords in south London a subscription-free service but charges a handling fee of £15 to £30 for each small repair, and 10 per cent of the cost of any jobs over £500. Mycaretaker admits that it doesn’t routinely inspect minor repairs, relying instead on photos submitted by tenants to show the job has been done, but at least you only pay for the service when you use it. Also, it does promise to inspect any work costing over £250. I can’t vouch for this personally, as have never used them. FirstAssist (firstassist-rls.co.uk) offers a similar service, but charges landlords a £49.99 membership fee. Alternatively, they can pay a £15-amonth subscription, which includes an annual gas safety check and boiler service plus an electrical safety PAT check and, most importantly, an annual property inspection. As my friend is concerned about keeping an eye on her tenants to make sure they don’t turn her house into a party pad, the latter option sounds like the better one for her. However, I still think it’s wise for landlords to inspect rental properties themselves at least every six months. After all, no one cares about a property nearly as much as its owner. O Victoria Whitlock lets three properties in south London. To contact Victoria with your ideas and views, tweet @vicwhitlock Find many more homes to rent at homesandproperty.co.uk/lettings @ @ FRIEND is moving into her new bloke’s house in the country, but she wants to hang on to her place in London, just in case she can’t get used to living more than 10 minutes’ walk from the nearest Starbucks. She has decided to let her house, but she isn’t sure how she is going to manage the property when she will be based an hour’s drive away. The simplest option would be to hire a letting agent to find tenants and manage everything, but she would have to give away at least 15 per cent of her rental income in commission and VAT, and she isn’t keen on that. Instead she is thinking of saving a few grand by finding tenants herself, advertising the property via one of the many online letting agents which charge less than £100. However, her dilemma is how to deal with repairs and emergencies from a distance. I managed three properties in London while living in France and it wasn’t difficult. As long as you’ve got a mobile phone and a good internet connection you can sort out most problems remotely. In 10 months I had only a few maintenance issues to deal with, including a blocked drain, a lock and a broken washing machine, and I managed to arrange all the repairs by phone or by email. My tenants were always happy to let in the workmen. The tricky bit, I tell my friend, is monitoring repairs to make sure they are not botched. I suppose this is the homesandproperty.co.uk with @ @ ;<@= @ ;< @8 @;> @ &$@ % )*+%%! @,!-@& % + @"&)@-!* (@ @ @@@7@&+(@&-%@"+.+(/@"&@*&@+)@""@/(@(&+%@:@'(&'(*/@'(*@. %@,!"" @@@@7@ +/@*&@*@+(%*@5A@(*+(%@'(@%%+$ @@@!%@"+.+(!&+)@"&)@* (&+ &+*@* @@(&$@&%"/@0;69 @@(&$@0992===@7@01692=== ? ? ? 36 WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property New homes homesandproperty.co.uk with Set sail for home. . . in the city Doesn’t your family deserve a super-room? ST PETER’S SQUARE is one of Hammersmith’s most coveted addresses, with grand, stucco-fronted Regency houses alongside an imposing domed church from the same era and listed public gardens. Into this neighbourhood has been slotted St Peter’s Place, four handsome new period-style townhouses, each with a family “superroom” opening on to a courtyard, plus five bedrooms, a cinema room, garden, terraces and two underground parking spaces. There’s up to 2,751sq ft of space in total. Offers over £3 million. Call Crest Nicholson on 020 3667 5113 for more information. £3 million-plus: St Peter’s Place townhouses, left and top, offer plenty of family space T HE regeneration of London’s waterways is creating opportunities for urban sailors. As well as the Thames, there are inland docks, lakes, canal basins and reservoirs where building projects are opening up access to the water for recreational use. Woodberry Park in Stoke Newington is a redevelopment of a Fifties council estate overlooking two From £250,000: Woodberry Park homes, right, Stoke Newington. Above, Hendon Waterside, beside Welsh Harp Reservoir Smart Sma art mo mov move ove ve e By David Spittles giant reservoirs and the New River. In Zone 2, it is an awesome, unexpected setting where up to 5,500 new homes, including glamorous highrise flats with spectacular views, are being built alongside the open water. A sailing club uses 42-acre West Reservoir, while East Reservoir is a vast nature reserve with a “trim trail” for joggers. In addition, there is a listed pumping station, a climbing centre and a café. Apartment blocks are linked by a series of “linear parks”, there is a new school and coming later is a 37 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2014 homesandproperty.co.uk with New homes Homes & Property Be a man (or woman) from the ministry in a Westminster flat SURREY SERVICE: TO THE CITY IN ONLY 40 MINUTES retail hub, with an open street market. Prices from £250,000. Call Berkeley Homes on 020 8985 9918. Hendon Waterside is being built alongside 30-acre Welsh Harp Reservoir, which has a boating club. Wembley and Seahorse Sailing Clubs are nearby, too. Barratt has launched Lakeview apartments, priced from £397,500. Call 0844 811 4334. BEHIND Millbank, the riverside strip best known for Tate Britain, lies a quiet, well-kept residential district with a mix of private, council and charitable housing and a growing number of new apartment schemes. The latter are often redevelopments of former ministry buildings, such as Abell & Cleland House in John Islip Street where homes start at £1.81 million. Call 020 7720 4000. Vincent Square is the neighbourhood’s best address, with homes overlooking 13 acres of private playing fields owned by Westminster School. Douglas House, left, moments from the square, is an office-toresidential conversion with 10 stylish two- and threebedroom flats. Prices from £1.53 million. Call Hamptons International on 020 7834 4771. Great Minster House is another redevelopment of offices into luxury flats, which are reached via a grand entrance foyer. Prices from £975,000. Call 0844 811 4321. IT CAN be quicker getting to work in London from a home counties commuter town or village than from a Travel Zone 3 or 4 address. Ashstead in Surrey is one such spot, with 40-minute trains to Waterloo and Victoria, and an annual season ticket costing not much more than £2,000. It is an archetypal village with highly regarded schools, a cricket club and plenty more local amenities including, on the doorstep, the RAC, an offshoot of the St James’s gentlemen’s club, with two 18-hole golf courses. The Warren, left, a leafy private enclave of homes on big plots, is one of the best addresses. Five substantial new houses have been built there, each of up to 7,704sq ft. Prices from £3.8 million. Call Millgate Homes on 0118 934 3344. SOAR ,(#,%% ,, ,$$# ( ( &,+),, ,",%##, &, $%( (&,%#,'!) , 15/,5,-,1/-/ 8-,"1,, -1501,1,5,8536,8,, /15853,50,91-,411,5,,110, 2,-7),-, ,/5/-1,51, 501,45,211,2,/4-316,# ,0, 7851,1-7,2,5182),-,-.16, , -88,020 7205 2593 9-58,SALES@LEXICONLONDON.CO.UK *55,LEXICONLONDON.CO.UK $5/1,/1/,-,591,2,5 9 1,311-10,59-31,-1,505/-51,8 , ,2,4,,4,,-,15/,54,/5,51