It may be bargain time for city centre apartments

Released on: December 10, 2007, 10:39 am

Press Release Author: Jim watson

Industry: Real Estate

Press Release Summary: Those walking around the centre of any provincial city will
be able to see a number of new apartment blocks, constructed during the recent
housing boom

Press Release Body: Those walking around the centre of any provincial city will be
able to see a number of new apartment blocks, constructed during the recent housing
boom. A second glance will provide evidence of further building as the potential
populations of central areas continue to expand.

Nor is this just a feature of big city centres. In such cities, development is now
spreading into inner urban areas, part of plans to revive run-down areas and utilise
brownfield site. The New East Manchester project is one example. These will still be
close enough to city centres for professionals working in them to travel without
having to commute long distances, least of all by car when many cities are proposing
congestion and road charges.

The other example is that of smaller cities, which have attempted to tap the city
living lifestyle market, only on a smaller scale.

However, it has been a common argument in recent times that the surge of apartment
building has gone too far, reaching the point of oversupply. Savills estate agents
warned in a recent report that developers in provincial cities had gone too far and
built too much. Assessing the situation in Birmingham, the agency warned that the
10,700 new build unites due to appear in the heart of the city over the next five
years could struggle to find buyers.

Marcus Dixon of Savills Research said: \"Developments in central Birmingham are not
only having to compete with other developments across the city centre but also
increasingly with schemes in suburban areas, which often are more affordably priced,
larger and in more attractive surroundings.\"

Mr Dixon warned that this could put such developments at a disadvantage,
particularly if they came up short on quality or local amenities.

In Liverpool, meanwhile, it might already appear that oversupply has led to a fall
in prices. The Liverpool Daily Post reported that a luxury apartment in the Beetham
Tower, which sold for over £206,000 in 2004, has recently gone for just £101,000 at
auction. This halving, the paper suggested, seemed to imply that the bubble had
burst.

However, there is another perspective, which may greatly interest property
investors. James Kersh, from local estate agency Sutton Kersh, told the paper the
typical value of a two-bed apartment in the city centre was £140,000, adding: \"This
sale is not indicative of the market, but it shows there has never been a better
time to buy.\"

Mr Kersh added: \"If you do have the cash, there is plenty on offer and plenty of
bargains. There are wide expectations that values will move up towards spring, 2008,
because the market in Liverpool is still under-valued.\"

If Mr Kersh\'s analysis is accurate, now may in fact be an ideal time to invest.
Those buying bargains now could see their value start to rise in the spring, with
demand and price picking up as 2008 progresses.

Such an analysis depends on some optimism, of course. More interest rate cuts and
the effects of the credit crunch tailing off would both help. But developers seem
confident enough that there will still be a market as they continue to seek to build
new apartments in the big cities. This week the BBC reported that Glasgow City
Council had approved an 850-apartment development on the Clyde waterfront, while the
Yorkshire Post reported last week that developer Kevin Lynfoot was looking to build
a skyscraper in the centre of Leeds.

Mr Lynfoot said that the mothballing of a project by George Wimpey on another site
in the city had been due to it\'s location in the wrong place, but that a building in
a prime location would always do well.

Thus the optimists among the developers press on with their building. In the
meantime, those looking for a bargain may well be able to snap one up before the
market recovers its breath and starts catching up with the fast moving pace of
apartment building.

In today\'s world Property investment is an excellent investment option especially
investment in UK

Web Site: http://www.assetz.co.uk

Contact Details: Address:Assetz House, Newby Road, Stockport,Cheshire,SK7 5DA

fax:0845 400 6010

email:linkexchangeseo@gmail.com

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