From yesterday's Evening Standard:
The maths of this is absolutely staggering. A selling price of £1,000/square foot internal area = £9,000/square yard, minus a generous £2,000/square yard construction cost = £7,000/square yard location value x ten storeys high = £70,000/square yard location value.
Knock off one-third for shared internal areas of the building and assume that the building occupies half the land and half is for car parking or other open spaces gets you to £110 million/acre. For comparison, a very large site in Chelsea was bought/sold for £78 million/acre a few years ago; The Battersea Power Station site, being on the 'wrong side of the river' was sold for a relatively modest £10 million per acre six years ago.
You can do your own workings for the value of a site in the poshest bits of west central London where flats sell for £2,800 per square foot. I reckon that a square yard of that land costs as much as a whole house and garden in cheaper parts of the UK.
Forbidden Bible Verses — Genesis 43:15-23
9 hours ago
4 comments:
My flat is "worth" about £340 per square yard. Should be a bargain!
Have to say though, the general attitude of that article p^d me right off. Its thought process can only seriously appeal to about 5% of the populace of London.
BE, don't you mean £340/square foot?
Yes, £340 per square foot. I think in square metres so had to convert...
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