Homes& Property Wednesday 11 February 2015 Warm up in Leagoo land Radiators Page 12 NEW HOMES IN ‘WOLF HALL’ P6 BOW FOR YOUNG BUYERS P8 RENTAL HOTSPOTS P9 MY AMAZING WINDOW P14 GRAHAM HUSSEY So Shoreditch Live in the un-Square Mile: Page 34 $' $ %!&''' ' ''&'" ' ''$# 4 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Online homesandproperty.co.uk with This week: homesandproperty.co.uk news: pop-up village to cut bill for housing families in B&Bs Bright and easy: in Lewisham, architect Richard Rogers is designing 24 temporary homes that will stay up for four years YOU’VE heard of pop-up restaurants, pop-up shops and even pop-up theatres — now London is to get its first pop-up village. Lewisham council has asked internationally renowned architect Richard Rogers to design a temporary cluster of 24 two-bedroom houses which will stand for four years on the site of a demolished leisure centre in Ladywell, before permanent homes are constructed. Lord Rogers hopes the scheme will become a cost-effective blueprint for other councils desperate to accommodate families on the waiting list who are currently housed in expensive B&Bs. Property search Trophy buy of the week be captain of your ship £1,685,000: nothing says you’ve made it like uncompromisingly modern architecture. This marineinspired beauty is firmly landlocked in lovely rolling countryside in Old Chelsfield, Kent, about 30 minutes from Bromley. You get four acres of grounds with paddocks and stables but it’s the five-bedroom house itself, with doubleheight reception rooms, picture windows, swimming pool and sundecks, that will turn home life into a cruise. Through Alan De Maid. O homesandproperty.co.uk/trophychelsfield London buy of the week a high-spec apartment in Clapham’s buzzing heart O Read Ruth Bloomfield’s full story at homesandproperty.co.uk hot homes: make it love at first site this Valentine’s Day £675,000: this super-smart first-floor flat just off Clapham High Street has had a complete makeover to its ample living space, resulting in a bright, highspec home perfect for entertaining. Desirable details include under-heated walnut floors, bespoke built-in storage in two double bedrooms — one en suite — plus white gloss cabinetry and integrated appliances in the kitchen/ dining area, open-plan to a spacious reception room lit by large windows. A secure underground parking space completes the deal. The Tube and Clapham Common are both a short stroll away. Through John D Wood. O homesandproperty.co.uk/buychs Life changer a farmhouse in 11 glorious Cornish acres £1.15 million: a two-bedroom penthouse in Hammersmith Bridge Road, with a fire pit terrace for year-round romance FALL for a heart-stopper this Valentine’s weekend — a ravishing penthouse perched above the city with a heated roof terrace, or perhaps a fairytale castle or a chocolatebox country cottage with a crackling inglenook fire. Join us on a whirlwind tour of Britain’s most romantic homes. £799,950: in Helston, Cornwall, Polkanugga Farmhouse comes with a holiday-let cottage, stables, paddocks and woodland, totalling 11 acres. There are wood burning stoves in the country-style kitchen/diner and sitting room, four bedrooms, two bathrooms and a conservatory. Workshops outside would make more guest rooms, with beautiful coastal walks nearby. Through Country & Waterside. O homesandproperty.co.uk/lifechangerhelston By Faye Greenslade O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/romantichomes Facebook: ESHomesAndProperty • Twitter: @HomesProperty • Pinterest: Editor: Janice Morley adorably soft... 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. hop over to our new Bath showroom The Peggy chair from £460. For reader offers visit www.sofa.com/eve, pop in to our London or Bath showroom or call us on 0345 400 2222. Editorial: 020 3615 2524 Advertisement manager: Jamie McCabe Advertising: 020 3615 0527 Homes & Property, Northcliffe House, 2 Derry Street, Kensington, London W8 5TT. @HomesProperty You be the judge WE ARE looking for 20 people, each with a passion for property, who are avid readers of Homes & Property and would like to join our judging panel for the 2015 Evening Standard New Homes Awards. You will work with industry experts to choose the best homes and schemes in London and the SouthEast. A shortlist will be drawn up by the experts, who will visit each site — but our reader judges will choose the winners in each category. You don’t need any professional qualifications to be a judge, just bags of enthusiasm for good-quality architecture and design, whether it’s a swanky loft, a family home or a well-built starter flat. HOW TO APPLY: if you would like to take part, tell us in no more than 150 words why you feel up to the task, detailing all relevant knowledge or experience. You will need to be free on the evening of Thursday, March 5 to attend the selection process in Kensington (refreshments provided) and all day on Thursday, April 9 for the final judging day. Please email your application to avril@signaturevents.co.uk 5 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 News Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with Homes gossip By Amira Hashish J-Lo’s garage — with an integral house ÉJENNIFER LOPEZ is É WHERE can you still buy a threebedroom house for £100,000? The answer is Liverpool, and this one was the childhood home of former Beatle Paul McCartney. The three-up, two-down terrace house is being sold at auction on February 26 at the Cavern Club, the Liverpool nightspot where the Fab Four got their first break. Sir Paul, 72 — who recently teamed up with rapper Kanye West and Rihanna on the Barbadian singer’s new single, FourFive Seconds — lived at the house in Western Avenue with his parents Jim and Mary until the mid-Fifties. Another Liverpool home, where Macca went on to spend his teens, is owned by the National Trust. The house for sale has a £100,000 guide price through Merseyside agent Entwistle Green (entwistlegreen.co.uk). É FOR Hollywood-style living close to home, the X Factor house has been spruced up since latest winner Ben Haenow, left, and his fellow contestants moved out a month ago to start their UK tour. The eight-bedroom, fourbathroom property, on the market with Statons for £2,795,000, is now looking immaculate. Spread over four floors, the 6,400sq ft house in Hadley Wood, Barnet, has a contemporary fitted kitchen overlooking the landscaped rear garden, which includes an impressive swimming pool, above. There is also a gym, where Fleur East and Jake Quickenden worked out, plus a wet room and sauna. It’s a 30-minute commute from Moorgate. O homesandproperty.co.uk/xfactor AP Got some gossip? Tweet @amiranews Buy X Factor Ben’s base SPLASH Bid £100,000 for the terrace home where Macca grew up selling her Los Angeles mansion. The nine-bedroom house, bought with exhusband Marc Anthony in 2010 for £5.4 million, is on the market for £11.2 million. All-singing, all-dancing Lopez, right, installed her own dance studio, recording room and 20-seat cinema at the 17,129sq ft property, which also comes with a garage that has room for eight cars, and a motor court with space for 20 more. Meanwhile, Lopez, mother of twins Emme and Max, six, is said to be looking for her next investment. Any crocs in that creek, Liana? É PRODUCER John Cornell, who discovered Aussie star Paul Hogan and wrote the screenplay for Crocodile Dundee, bought two flats at Prospect Quay in Wandsworth, left, in 1998 as an investment for his daughters. Now Liana Cornell, right, who followed in her Australian father’s footsteps to produce and act in film and theatre, is selling her two- bedroom flat for £749,950. Based in Australia, she was in The Winter’s Tale at the Sydney Opera House last year. On the market with River Homes, the secondfloor flat has a balcony with views across the Thames towards the Hurlingham Club and comes with porter services, plus a shared gym and swimming pool. O homesandproperty.co.uk/lia ! 6 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property New homes homesandproperty.co.uk with All the grandeur of Wolf Hall — without the risks Magnificent restoration and sensitive design are turning these historic trophy estates into homes for London commuters to the manor born, discovers David Spittles F EW homes set the heart racing more than grand apartments carved from heritage buildings such as country mansions, Victorian hospitals, former convents and colleges in the leafy commuter belt. High-quality conversions that retain the best of the old architecture while creating new floorplans and interiors to suit modern lifestyles always impress, and buyers’ appetite for them is keen. It is about more than classic good looks and a sense of history. Often these homes are set in lavishly landscaped grounds and reached via a carriage drive or tree-lined avenue, making for a marvellous sense of arrival. Properties are usually leasehold and residents pay service charges for amenities, such as a gym or concierge, and for upkeep of grounds. But charges are rarely more onerous than for typical city apartment schemes. “Refurbishment and reinstatement of historic features is much more expensive than building from scratch so it takes commitment and expertise to make these projects work,” says developer Bob Weston, whose latest challenge is Preston Hall, a magnificent Jacobean mansion with a grand stone façade, stained-glass windows, high, ornate ceilings, rich wood wall panelling and marquetry, and festooned with turrets, towers, stone carvings and heraldic symbols. The house stands on the River Medway at Aylesford, Kent, with the journey to St Pancras just 34 minutes from Strood station. Built in 1102, Preston Hall was once the home of Joyce Culpeper, mother of Henry VIII’s fifth wife, Catherine Howard. Sir Thomas Culpeper, another member of the family, was Catherine’s secret lover. Both were executed when their affair was discovered. In Victorian times the house was enlarged by railway baron Edward Betts, and in the First World War served Historic magnificence: ornate ceiling and gallery, right, among features at Preston Hall, built in 1102 and enlarged in the Victorian era. Far right, the grand entrance. Flats from £190,000 as a hospital for shell-shocked soldiers. It became part of the NHS but was bought in 2012 by Weston Homes after a period lying empty. Bob Weston unleashed an army of craftspeople to restore the mansion and create 36 luxurious one- to four-bedroom apartments with double-height mezzanine spaces, and new villas in the grounds carved from stables and an orangery. The three-storey great hall with its original oak staircase, gallery and glass cupola has become a communal space for residents. English Heritage will not accept “false history”, so anything reinstated must be as true to the original as possible. Weston Homes brought back into use a network of Tudor tunnels and wine cellars. Two stone lions, sculpted in 1838 and later stolen from the estate, have been returned to their plinths at the entrance to the house, while a restored Versailles-style stone fountain with four mermaids is the focal point of the 2.5-acre grounds. A two-bedroom show flat is open for viewing. Prices start at £190,000 and rise to £700,000, with completion due this summer. Call 01279 873 333. ARTS & CRAFTS PRIZE Heritage specialist City & Country understands this niche market better than most, taking on challenging res- toration projects such as dilapidated Victorian asylums. As its name suggests, the company brings back the beauty of the original structure and adds metropolitan design glamour. Chief executive Tim Sargeant works closely with heritage organisations to return buildings to use. King Edward VII Estate, near Midhurst in West Sussex, lies within the South Downs National Park. Built in 1901 as a tuberculosis hospital, it has been hailed as an Arts & Crafts masterpiece and includes a Grade II*-listed chapel with prized stained-glass windows that is due to become a café and shop for residents when the 162-home project is complete later this year. The listed grounds, originally planted by famed horticulturalist Gertrude Jekyll, are an early example of ”therapeutic gardens”, linking with the buildings and the wider landscape. Five miles of footpaths are being created through the estate’s mature oak woodland and heath. Residents will also have a swimming pool and gym. Trains to Victoria take just under an hour. The first homes go on sale next month, with prices from £195,000 to £995,000. To register, call 01730 817979. CROSSRAIL BONUS Other City & Country projects include The General, Bristol, a former hospital being converted into 206 homes priced from £285,000. The Galleries in Brentwood, Essex, another hospital restoration, includes stunning loft-style spaces. Prices from £420,000. David Simpson is managing director of developer Millgate. He and his team are recreating Woolley Hall, a grand Georgian mansion near Littlewick Green, a few miles from Maidenhead station, which is 24 miles from London and soon to be Crossrail-linked. The listed estate dates from 1780 and is set 7 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 New homes Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with From £429,950: flats at Royal Connaught Park in Bushey, Hertfordshire, used in Harry Potter movies From £825,000: apartments, houses and mews homes at Woolley Hall, an 18th-century listed estate in Berkshire woodland Stunning: above, a double-height galleried communal space at Preston Hall, where Tudor wine cellars have been brought back into use From £190,000: apartments at Preston Hall, left a Kent Jacobean mansion, once home to the family of Henry VIII’s doomed fifth wife, Catherine Howard. Inset, one of two stone lions stolen from the estate, now returned to their entrance plinths in 24 acres of woodland. Six grand apartments, up to 3,700sq ft, are being created in the main house with original wood panelling and fireplaces, ornate plasterwork and stained-glass windows. Prices from £825,000. Five new houses, from £3.1 million, are being built in the gated grounds, plus mews houses and homes in a restored stable block. Call 01628 674234. Royal Connaught Park in Bushey, Hertfordshire, is set in 100 acres of parkland and was originally the Royal Masonic School for Boys. The architecture is grand Edward ian and it doubled as Hogwarts school in some scenes in the Harry Potter film franchise. New homes have been created from the school’s ancillary buildings, which have big windows, vaulted ceilings, ornate stonework, wooden beams and plaster cornicing. Prices range from £429,950 to £2.79 million. Call 01923 222292. O For more pictures, visit homesandproperty.co.uk/luxury Handsome, well-connected homes: Woolley Hall is near Maidenhead station, soon to have Crossrail trains into central London From £195,000: homes at King Edward VII Estate near Midhurst, West Sussex 8 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property First-time buyers homesandproperty.co.uk with ALAMY £340,000 first-time buy: above left, a two-bedroom, two-bathroom flat ideal for sharers at Twelvetrees Crescent, Bow (homesandproperty.co.uk/12trees). Above right, £305,000: flats at Lock Keepers, a Peabody scheme, with shared-ownership options available (homesandproperty.co.uk/lock) Getting their feet wet: East End artists competing at Bow in the Annual Regent’s Canal Raft Race £100,000 flats. Can you Adam and Eve it? Huge regeneration is the Olympic legacy for Bow in the East End, with waterside homes and great transport. By Ruth Bloomfield B % !% %$ ! $ &# ! " % !# ! "$ $ $ 0207 515 1491 www.av-e14.co.uk NEED TO KNOW BOW limited. But Sarah Butler, sales director at Peabody, says: “There is a lot of regeneration going on in the area. There are two new developments going up, and it is only 10 minutes by Tube to Westfield. It benefits from waterside living — it is beside the Limehouse Cut — and the tie to the outdoors. You are also alongside the River Lee and it is a 10minute walk to the Olympic Park at Stratford.” Devons Road DLR station, in Zone 2, is a short walk away, with direct links to Canary Wharf in 10 to 15 minutes. Lock Keepers, with 109 flats in three blocks, is also close to Bromley-by-Bow Tube, with District and Hammersmith & City line trains to the City in about quarter of an hour, and services beyond. The old Bryant & May match factory, now called Bow Quarter, holds 700 homes, and the Georgian townhouses of Tredegar Square sell for several million pounds. Berkeley Homes and Barratt London both have major local projects and Crossways estate has been revamped and renamed Bow Cross. OW has turned out to be the biggest winner of the London Olympics, with billions of pounds of regeneration money pouring into the E3 postcode. Glue factories and slaughterhouses have been replaced by smart new flats perfect for Canary Wharf workers, and fashionable bars are being hewn out of East End boozers. Average local property prices now stand at about £400,000 but a new waterside scheme from housing association Peabody will provide starter homes from just over £100,000. A 35 per cent share of a one-bedroom flat at Lock Keepers, with a full price of £305,000, will come in at £106,750. The estimated monthly outgoings including mortgage, rent and service charge will be about £1,175. A 35 per cent share of a two-bedroom flat is £140,000 and there are also some three-bedroom duplex properties priced at £178,500 for 35 per cent. The area is rather industrial, a little too close to the traffic-clogged A12 and Blackwall Tunnel approach for comfort, and on-the-doorstep facilities are O Visit peabodysales.co.uk Past: the suffragette movement was born in Bow when Bryant & May match girls went on strike for better conditions in 1888. In 1912 Sylvia Pankhurst set up the East London Federation of Suffragettes at 198 Bow Road. Future: the post-war Leopold Estate is being replaced with 364 new flats — 108 affordable — by 2019. Trivial pursuit: moving to Bow won’t make you a Cockney — the saying about being born within earshot of the bells of Bow church refers to St Maryle-Bow Church which is in the City. What it costs: an average home in Bow costs £399,970 up 12.51 per cent in the last year, while an average twobedroom flat rents at £1,137 a month, says Zoopla property website. Landmarks: the seven Grade II-listed gas holders at the Bromley-by-Bow gasworks were built in the 1870s. Eat: Carmelite Café in Bow Road is a former nunnery turned into an upscale coffee house with great sandwiches and an adjacent art gallery. Drink: East London Liquor Company makes its own spirits including gin. Take a tour, buy a souvenir, or have a drink in the industrial-style bar, in a former glue factory. Buy: Growing Concerns in Wick Lane, an excellent garden centre, runs regular community workshops. Walk: Bow aces the green space test. You can walk through Mile End Park, via Victoria Park and on to the Queen Elizabeth II Park and Hackney Marshes. 9 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 homesandproperty.co.uk with Renting Homes & Property RENTAL HOTSPOT WEST HAMPSTEAD FACT FILE: ALAMY E VEN 150 years ago, housebuilders knew the importance of branding. West Hampstead, in Zone 2, could so easily have been called East Kilburn. Occupying a slope of land between two ancient highways heading north out of central London, its 1860s developers wanted homes they built associated the with the monied hilltop village of Hampstead on the area’s eastern flank rather than Kilburn, a rural hamlet to the west. West Hampstead has been popular ever since. Those Victorians built terraces. Then came a generation of mansion blocks, followed in the 20th century by council estates and the conversion of houses into flats. Buzzy and cosmopolitan, the area is now a fashionable inner suburb, with handsome red-brick houses reverting back to single homes . It is familyfriendly with close proximity to highly praised private schools, one reason why Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has chosen to live there. Transport links are excellent, while community spirit is “great”, says Jenni Towler of Benham & Reeves Lettings. “In a cultural sense, West Hampstead straddles the best of both worlds. It borders Hampstead with its rich literary tradition and leafy seclusion, and also Kilburn — edgy, bustling, with a vibrant live music scene.” Kilburn has several more things in its favour. Firstly, it is close-in — straight up Edgware Road from Marble Arch and nearer to the centre than, say, Hammersmith or Hackney. Transport links are very good — Bakerloo and Jubilee line Tube, plus Overground rail and proximity to Paddington, with its Heathrow link, and Crossrail for the future. “It’s definitely up and coming,” says Debbie Reiter of Benham & Reeves Lettings. “It has street cred, which young professionals like, while corporate tenants favour the semis in the Matesbury conservation area.” All kinds of homes can be had at prices still a fair bit lower than in trendy nearby areas — from converted flats to artisan cottages, Victorian terraces and Edwardian villas. Spine of the area: West End Lane in fashionable West Hampstead is packed with coffee shops, bakeries, bistros and bars Make the connection Great transport links, including Crossrail on the horizon, mean this spot in Zone 2 is a hit with young professional renters. By David Spittles New scheme: Mill Apartments, with 39 flats in Mill Lane, near a nature reserve £650 a week: a three-bedroom period conversion flat in popular Goldhurst Terrace, NW6. Through Benham & Reeves (homesandproperty.co.uk/rentgold) Average rental values (per week) One-bedroom flat £300-£400 Two-bedroom flat £400-£600 Three-bedroom house £800-£1,100 For tights budgets, rentals start at £220 a week for studios, £285 a week for bigger ex-council flats. You’ll pay a premium, about £650 a week, for a large period conversion. Best roads: Crediton Hill, Kingdon Road, Dennington Park Road, Sumatra Road and Holmdale Road are popular. Typical tenants: mainly young single professionals and no-kids couples wanting to live in a good residential area. They get more for their money than in Hampstead itself and new restaurants, bars and shops are opening. A Waitrose is planned and new developments are popping up, pushing up local rents. Influences on the market: superb transport links, with Bakerloo and Jubilee Tube lines — Bond Street is a few stops away — plus Overground rail and proximity to Paddington, with its Heathrow link, and Crossrail for the future. There are three train stations, one recently refurbished, and West Hampstead is a main interchange, with Thameslink, Tube and Overground services, and good links to Stansted, Gatwick and Luton airports. Major new developments: a former business estate, West Hampstead Square has apartments, gardens, a new public square, Marks & Spencer, cafés and restaurants, a gym, dance studio, spa and hotel-style reception with concierge (westhampsteadsq.com; ballymore.co.uk). Mill Apartments, a new scheme of 39 flats in Mill Lane, borders a nature reserve. Out and about: there are lots of buzzing bars and good affordable restaurants. The train station forecourt doubles as a farmers’ market and street food hub, complementing West End Lane, the spine of the area, with coffee shops, bakeries, boutiques, bistros and bars. Mill Lane, which cuts across railway tracks to Cricklewood, is gentrifying, with antique shops, delis and gastropubs. Top local schools: South Hampstead High (private); Northbridge House (private); Hampstead High (state), and Emmanuelle School (state). 10 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Homes abroad homesandproperty.co.uk with Alpine fun with families in mind From £146,000: Arlberg Chalets, Wald am Arlberg. through Pure International Get the max all year out of a good-value chalet in Austria, says Cathy Hawker From £711,700: flats at Arlberg 1800 Residences. Through Pure (as before) T TOP-PRICE LECH ALAMY HE strong pound, at a sevenyear high against the euro this month, has made a home in the Eurozone 10 per cent more affordable than at the start of last year. Turmoil in Greece could add to single currency woes. “British buyers in the Alps certainly realise there is an opportunity,” says Paul Kleinkorte from Pure International. “Austria already has a reputation for value. Build quality is as good as in Switzerland but prices are far better, and resorts are small scale and family friendly.” Year-round resort: St Christoph am Arlberg, where new flats share facilities of the Arlberg Hospiz Hotel, right of picture APRÈS-SKI IS THE BEST IN EUROPE’ JULIAN and Julia Rooth from Ramsdell in Hampshire should get the keys to their new Austrian home later this year. The couple, seen left with sons Nico and Ollie, 15 and 13, bought an offplan, ski-in apartment at Arlberg 1800 Residences. “We were attracted to Austria for its authentic resorts, tight planning restrictions and the best après-ski in Europe,” says Julian, 47. “We chose the ROYAL RESORTS Pure is selling properties in the Arlberg ski region in west Austria, 50 minutes by car or train from Innsbruck. Like its snow record, its pedigree is strong. Arlberg is home to super-chic villages such as St Anton, Lech and Zürs where European royal families love to ski. Princess Diana, William and Harry were regulars at the Arlberg Hotel in Lech and local second home owners include F1 driver Sebastian Vettel. Arlberg also has a strong summer season thanks to two 18-hole golf courses and hundreds of miles of walking and cycling tracks. Lech is one of Austria’s most beautiful villages, stuffed with award-winning restaurants and bars, and all of this provides generous rental yields, the highest in the Alps averaging five to seven per cent, says Kleinkorte. PROPERTIES FOR SALE Small, traditional and decidedly sleepy Wald am Arlberg, just 20 minutes from Lech and St Anton, lacks their highvoltage fame — and their prices. In the centre of Wald at Arlberg Chalets, work is about to start on 35 flats and 21 chalets. A local bus service connects to the ski lifts in Stuben, while less than a mile away Sonnenkopf ski area is particularly good for children. Prices start at £146,000 to £370,850 for one- to three-bedroom properties with annual service charges from £750. Unlike most holiday homes in the Austrian Alps, there is no rental obligation on owners at Arlberg Chalets. So far 21 units are bought or reserved with Arlberg region for its excellent and varied skiing in Lech and St Anton, and the security that these premium resorts would give to our investment. And it has the best bar in the Alps — MooserWirt in St Anton.” The family intend to use their flat for four weeks winter-ski and up to six weeks in summer for hiking, biking and golf. O Pure International: 020 3695 4095 buyers coming from the UK, Austria and across the border in Switzerland. “These new homes start from £340 per square foot,” says local developer Reinhard Wolf. “Twenty minutes away in Lech you could pay up to £2,200 a square foot for a resale apartment with no rental restriction — that’s if you can find one for sale.” Wolf has also developed at the very top end of the market in Lech itself. Four fully furnished, seven-bedroom luxe chalets at Chalech, connected to the stylish five-star Aurelio Hotel, will be priced from £4,645,000. The hotel will manage and rent the chalets, each with its own pool and spa, at daily rents up to £28,500. “Lech has a top snow record and is architecturally restrictive so you will never see ugly towers,” says Wolf. “Last season the Arlberg ski area connected Lech with Warth to the east so that it now has over 90 lifts.” Pure International is also selling Arlberg 1800 Residences in St Christoph am Arlberg, winter base for the Austrian ski team. These two- to fivebedroom flats will be built in two large chalets in the heart of the thriving village and will share the pool, spa, fitness facilities, restaurants and concierge of the Arlberg Hospiz Hotel. Prices start from £711,700 for 1,022sq ft. Four apartments linked to the Arlberg Hospiz Hotel have already been completed in the Skyfall development, including one bought and decorated by an English family. The five-bedroom home with a kitchen designed by Linley rents for up to £37,500 a week. O Pure International: pureintl.com O For an Austrian investment guide, visit Mark Warner Property: markwarnerproperty.com the PENTHOUSES & the DUPLEXES Prices from £699,950 Launching tomorrow, 12 th February CALL TO REGISTER: OR VISIT: mettleandpoise.com A development by: Featured: Computer generated image of an interior at Mettle&Poise 020 3376 7775 Joint selling agents: 12 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Design Keep cosy in style with clever home heating and insulation technology. Caramel Quin finds the hottest new products WINTER… JASON MUTEHAM RADIATOR COVERS Want to hide ugly radiators but find covers just as ugly? Kent-based furniture designer Jason Muteham makes uniquely handsome covers. These custom-made pieces start at £250 for a ready-to-paint cover. Real wood veneer (oak, ash, beech, cherry, sapele, maple, walnut or zebrano), hardwearing laminate and painted finish are also available. Or they can be covered with your choice of fabric, to match soft furnishings. Visit jasonmuteham.com VENTIVE PVHR Passive Ventilation with Heat Recovery lets your home benefit from fresh air, reducing allergies, condensation and mould, without heat loss or draughts. Old air passes up a duct to the roof and is exchanged for new, while clever design means up to 95 per cent of the heat from the old air is transferred to the new air. This pre-warmed fresh air is then returned into the room. Ventive S is designed to retrofit into existing, unused chimney stacks while Ventive S+ is for new builds and homes without unused chimneys. Prices start at £350. Visit ventive.co.uk %% % ' % - - * - DUOSHADE THERMAL BLINDS This blind looks pleated but in fact it’s made of hexagonal “honeycomb” pockets, left, that trap air, creating a layer of insulation. This is teamed with an aluminium reflective lining that acts as a thermal barrier, as well as giving the blind blackout properties. Duoshade blinds will help keep the heat in, so you’ll save on heating bills, yet they are surprisingly affordable, starting at £15.36 for a madeto-measure 40cmx40cm blind. Visit blinds-2go.co.uk %"+&"&)& +&#&( #&#& #"&)++ ( EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 13 Design Homes & Property LEAGOO AND REX RADIATORS If you decide to replace your radiators, choose from the latest designs that look nothing like radiators. The cheekily named Leagoo (above, £676) with its playful building block design is ideal for children’s rooms, while the colourful, flat-panel Rex radiator, priced from £719, is available in 208 different hues at no extra charge and has a discreet design that fits beautifully in a contemporary space. Both are suitable for electric or central heating. Visit design-radiator.co.uk …WARMER MORSO 1446 MULTIFUEL STOVE Flueless gel fires may look the part but they don’t heat a room like a wood burning stove. But you do need a flue for a wood burner — it’s the column of rising air that brings more air behind it to feed the fire. If you don’t have a chimney, fear not: the flue can bend 45 degrees into an external wall and then run up the side of the building. This Morso (£892 delivered) burns so clean that it is approved for use in smoke control areas. Stoves Online offers a free chimney design service and can put you in touch with a local installer. Visit stovesonline.co.uk LAKELAND DRY-SOON HEATED AIRER ! $$ ! ! , A designer radiator loses its elegance the day you start hanging wet socks over it. What’s more, it loses efficiency. So what to do in the winter when line drying isn’t an option? The DrySoon three-tier heated airer (£92.99) from Lakeland is perfect for items that can’t be tumbled and a godsend if you don’t have a tumble dryer. Add the optional cover (£29.99) to keep the heat in, speeding up the drying process. It may not be pretty, but it dries clothes fast, avoids radiator clutter and keeps moisture in one room — great in a bathroom or utility room. Visit lakeland.co.uk 14 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property My home homesandproperty.co.uk with View to the Shard: the triangular glass wall where once were graffiti-covered bricks in the Kensal Rise converted loft Triangular window on the world An interior designer lifted the roof off a poky flat over a shop, creating space and light with a dramatic glass wall. By Jacky Parker M ARK NEWMAN was a freelance interior designer refurbishing homes when he met Thomas Zieglmeier, a freelance architect, while sharing an office space in Ladbroke Grove 11 years ago. “We sat next to each other and would often chat over our projects,” says Newman. “We then collaborated on a couple of developments and decided to start a company, Newman Zieglmeier.” The duo have since risen to glittery heights transforming the homes of fashion industry and media types such as designer Alice Temperley and A-list make-up artist Charlotte Tilbury. Partnering with building contractors Zibi & Jack to deliver a design and build service, Newman Zieglmeier’s knack for clever space planning has proved a hit in their stretch of west London, an area filled with narrow Victorian terraces, often badly carved into flats. Newman’s own home in Kensal Rise is a perfect example. Built at the turn of the last century, the property is today a feat of spatial innovation. “It’s rare to find somewhere with a loft space that has so much scope,” says Newman. Seeing the potential in what A lesson in style: Mark Newman in his kitchen, where the bank of bespoke grey gloss units is beautifully teamed with super-thin white worktops in Bianco Absoluto, a composite stone. The appliances are from Neff and the fridge is from Miele Photographs: Bill Kingston was a poky top-floor, two-bedroom flat above a shop, albeit with an unusual apex, the designer snapped it up. He removed three of the magnolia-painted partition walls, ripped up the plywood floor, took out two fireplaces and raised the ceilings by about eight inches, to create an open-plan space that includes a kitchen and sitting and dining area. There is a separate bedroom, a shower room and a roof terrace, too. “It’s a very sociable apartment, with a great kitchen. I can chat to guests while I’m cooking and people can sit outside in the summer,” he says. T HE highlight is the transformation of the loft and its previously graffiti-covered exterior gable end, where the roof was lifted off. It is now a spacious bedroom with a dramatic triangular glass wall, which not only fills the room with light but also provides spectacular views across the capital, taking in local landmark Trellick Tower and even the Shard beyond. “There were a few challenges with the planning application and the build,” says Newman. “Mainly with the glass, both on the plans and when hoisting it in, as access was restricted.” 15 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 My home Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with The bedroom: stairs, right, lead to the new loft space, left and far right, with a dramatic gable end window offering views over London. The bedroom walls are painted in Paint & Paper Library Slate IV, and the palelilac, wool carpet is from Heal’s. Glass balustrades allow more natural light in. The freestanding bath is by Victoria + Albert, with taps by Crosswater, both from Nuline (nu-line.net) The open-plan living area: the décor was kept neutral and muted for a timeless look. “I like colour but can only live with it for a short time before I want to change it,” explains Newman. “And white can be a little stark unless it’s in a big space.” A stylish fumed-oak floor from Element 7 runs throughout (element7.co.uk) O Similar projects from Newman Zieglmeier start from £150,000 (newman zieglmeier.com) *(#"$0"-1-('"" "&1$"0-1-('"%"*$$((."1$""!+."(*-(('"-"*0$'"" $0(.",($/(.&1"$'",("$&-$('"0*"$("(*-(('"$'(1$/")" *(#"$0"-1-('. (*-(('")"&("'"0"$*,"("!""(("'" !""*0$'. 20 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Design homesandproperty.co.uk with My de des es By Liz Hoggard Alex Sainsbury DIRECTOR AND CURATOR OF RAVEN ROW GALLERY, E1 THIERRY BAL E VEN as a child, supermarkets heir Alex Sainsbury, 46, was surrounded by fabulous things. His wealthy family collected art — his father funded the £50 million Sainsbury Wing at the National Gallery — so it’s not surprising that Alex grew up wanting an art gallery of his own. After two decades working in the contemporary art world, in 2009 he founded Raven Row in an 18th-century Grade I-listed building in Spitalfields. With the help of Bloomsbury-based 6A architects, he spent four years restoring the building as a non-profit contemporary art exhibition centre, renowned for its original programming. “The hope,” he says, “is that it will add to the London art scene in the same way that the Whitechapel or the South London Gallery has.” WHERE I LIVE I live close to King’s Road. I grew up there and have memories of it as a child, as I tried to navigate the Seventies scene; being sworn at by punks was pretty exciting. I’m very lucky, very privileged, because I had the opportunity to build my own home in Tite Street, down by the Embankment, quite close to the river. It has been a privilege to build two architectural projects in London — a private house and this gallery, both with young British architects, 6a. MY HOME I looked for a site everywhere for five years. It wasn’t just that I wanted to live London life: Alex Sainsbury loves the towers of Barbican, left. With modernist 6a architects of Bloomsbury, he “keyed into history” to build his home in Chelsea, above in Chelsea, I was eager to find somewhere in Clerkenwell but never managed. It was taken over by the professional loft developers in those days. I was working for [the architect] Tony Fretton at the time and I showed him a few places that were makeshift and quite difficult. And he said: “No, no.” He wanted me to be ambitious, which I am so grateful for, because the site I have now is very, very wonderful and living on the river itself is fantastic. 6a are modernists but the house is near where Whistler and Wilde lived, so we keyed into that history, making a case for English Heritage. HOME COLOURS/ TEXTURES I was in my twenties when I moved in and unmarried, and I tried to imagine what it might be like to live in a married house — which I failed to do exactly. So now it is an adapted batchelor pad. I like warm colours, which is very English. I think it’s our miserable weather that drives us to warm interiors. I work with a really wonderful house painter, Richard Clark, who is out of the art world but mixes his own paints. So $# $ $$## ! $# $ $ !$ " !# # " ## ! KING’S CROSS ON A NEW LEVEL 21 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 Design Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with we’ve got pinks and yellows and golds and silvers as well as textured ivorywhites like a plaster wall finish. For Raven Row I also worked with Patrick Baty of Papers and Paints who have brilliant paint mixes, especially one called Quiet White, the best white I have ever come across. Good paint is the answer. It doesn’t have to be expensive, you can go down to Leyland and get it done. I remember an extraordinary green wall they mixed for a show I hosted in the early days . LIGHT AND FLOW — AND DECIDING WHAT WORKS As an art movement minimalism is unbelievably important, but as an architectural style it’s bombastic and overdemonstrative, so it doesn’t actually work. I prefer soft edges and texture in the form of rugs and beautiful woods, which the early Miesian modernists were keen on as well. And light, flowing curtains, but not these crazy, very heavy, traditional English curtains which I find too much. hugely enjoyable. I like St John tremendously, of course, which is very much the darling of the art world, and Moro which my cousin Mark co-founded with the Clarks. CULTURAL HOTSPOT The Bold Tendencies sculpture show and Frank’s bar that Hannah Barry organises on the multi-storey car park roof in Peckham every summer. SECRET SHOP AMAZING ARCHITECTURE I love watches. I lived in the Barbican for a while and I hugely enjoyed going to the little yellow hole-in-the-wall place on Clerkenwell Road, run by this committed watch enthusiast called John. It’s a fascinating place because it’s got all the old equipment for mending and repairing, as well as a fantastic collection of stuff. He has a lot of Omega watches, which are wonderful things. I’m not crazy about the white stucco of west London, I prefer east London. But I love the tower of Christ Church right round where I live — surely one of the greatest pieces of architecture in London — and the Buddhist temple in Battersea Park, one of the last architectural commissions of the GLC. In terms of contemporary design, going into the Museum of Childhood always gives me a huge kick; Caruso St John’s front there is brilliant. And I love what they’ve done to Tate Britain. MOST COVETED DESIGN OBJECT Furniture, and of course it is fantasy stuff because I don’t own it. A cabinet by Italian designer Martino Gamper, who had a show at the Serpentine recently, would be a fantastic thing. TYPICAL WEEKEND It’s very child-centred so I’m bicycling round Battersea Park with them. We go to lots of children’s theatre such as the Polka, Unicorn and the Puppet Theatre in Little Venice. There’s a wonderful children’s zoo in Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens. We definitely keep our kids away from technology. At five and three, they will come to it soon enough. FAVOURITE GALLERY Chisenhale Gallery, run brilliantly by Polly Staple. Their brief seems to be to show most interesting, manageable, youngish artists. A favourite commercial gallery is Old Street’s Cabinet Gallery. They are about to open another space in the old Pleasure Gardens at Vauxhall. MY DREAM HOME My orientation is more east than west, so I suppose it would be a two-storey house with a roof garden in Clerkenwell designed by Tony Fretton or 6a. LONDON’S DOWNSIDE? I’m going to be very traditional and say my favourite restaurant is La Famiglia in World’s End, an old Tuscan trattoria from the days of Swinging London. On Sunday night there’s nothing better than repairing there. It is pricey but I don’t want to come across as a grumpy middle-aged man, but it is difficult not to be upset about property prices. It has definitely affected artists and all cultural workers. Anything other than being a banker precludes living within Zones 1 to 4 really. And artists rely on communities for cohesion and conversations — it’s a lonely business in the studio. I think art and cultural production in London is genuinely under threat. From left: Martino Gamper makes cabinets coveted by Alex, who says Frank’s bar at Peckham car park is a cultural hotspot, and who enjoys taking the family to puppet theatre shows O Raven Row, 56 Artiller y Lane, Spitalfields, E1, is open Wednesday to Sunday, 11am to 6pm. Admission is free. Visit ravenrow.org. ■Twitter: @JKatieLaw REX DAVID BUTLER BEST RESTAURANT 24 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Our home homesandproperty Mum’s on a mission When you buy a dump, have faith and vision, hire the right architect, get lucky with the builder and you can have your paradise, says Philippa Stockley A ■Twitter: @stockleyp Photographs: Kilian O’Sullivan and Adrian Lourie HOUSE can be much more than just a house. For Judy Yu, the modern home she has created in Maida Vale for herself, her husband and their children, Lucas, four, and Marissa, two, was a long labour of love in which she fulfilled a childhood dream. Judy’s parents lived in Hong Kong for two years as Vietnam war refugees before coming to Ipswich in 1979. Her mother was Vietnamese and her father Chinese. “They didn’t have a pair of chopsticks between them,” she says. Judy was born in 1980, but her father worked so hard she only saw him on Sundays. In 1988 the family moved to Islington and Judy grew up there, taking a degree in psychology before working in a law firm. In 2006 she met her future husband, and they married in 2009. Lucas was born in 2010. “We were renting in Chelsea, I spent years looking for the right family home with a big garden and off-street parking,” she says. Judy drew a blank in Chelsea, Gloucester Road and South Kensington. Then, pregnant with Marissa, she widened the net to Barnes, Richmond and Putney. Finally, in 2013, she hired a property searcher. “One day she rang about a house that wasn’t in our chosen areas and said, ‘You have to see this, it ticks all the boxes, but someone else wants it so you have to move right now.’” Judy set off at once to Maida Vale. The semi-detached house was in one of the late-Victorian terraces Join the luxury holiday home specialists... Many luxury properties deliver over 39 weeks! designed for a booming middle class. It was divided into lots of rooms, particularly in the dark basement, which had a low ceiling and an ugly conservatoryextension on the back. This extension butted up clumsily against the brick retaining wall of the overgrown lawn, at the end of which lurked a giant shed. The house looked as if nothing had been done for 30 years. “It was like Miss Havisham’s house — it was eerie, my skin was crawling. The hall was dark and dingy. The guy had stuck CDs to the ceiling and once answered the door stark naked.” But apart from a crumbling roof the place was structurally sound, so Judy and her husband put in an offer — and completed in June 2013. She interviewed three architects whose work her husband had read about in design magazines and immediately liked Chris Eaton, who paid a site visit. “I just asked him what he saw, and he pretty much described what I wanted.” So Judy hired him. It was the same with the builder. “I looked at three, met Jon Loveday, and loved him as a person.” SIMPLE SOPHISTICATION The architects’ design removed unnecessary internal walls and used a grown-up, sophisticated palette of dark wood, black steel, bronze, travertine feature walls and a lot of glass. All the planners rejected was a flat roof over the remodelled extension. A cramped study at the end of the hall that blocked light went, to be replaced by smart Crittall glass walls — a transformative act that lightens the entire raised ground floor. Everything else on t h a t f l o o r w a s s t re a m l i n e d a n d smoothed. A “library room” looking out to the back garden through a boxy new bay window has a stunning fireplace wall of travertine. Black-stained engineered Favourite family spot: Judy, Marissa and Lucas in the once-dingy basement space, now transformed !" " Top-lit living space: flowing out to the garden through floor-to-ceiling glass doors Less is more: subtle styling and palette for bathroom elegance 25 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 Our home Homes & Property y.co.uk with Lightening device: Crittall glass walls oak floorboards echo the black steel of the Crittall frames. The lovely door handles are bronze, and the handrail down to the transformed basement is beautifully crafted bronze: formal and elegant. The lower floor’s muddle of little dark rooms and a nasty toilet were ripped out, as was the old conservatory. Now a spacious, serene white kitchen with soft grey Corian worktops flows around a central screen of shelves into a top-lit living space. This flows straight out to the garden through floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors. FOR THE CHILDREN The old outside wilderness has become a chic three-tier affair. The glass doors lead to a smart entertaining area with concealed speakers and stylish planting. There’s a water feature in a long trough, and the middle section is edged with topiary — magnolia stellata, wisteria, alliums and acers. The end part is just for the children, with murals on the side walls, tough fake grass and a climbing tower designed by Judy. All the building, including remodelling the upper levels and dropping the floors of the attic rooms to give a decent head height, was done in 10 months. The basement is now big and bright. “We thought we would spend most time upstairs, but we spend it here where I can cook and keep an eye on the children.” This is a very grown-up house, but perhaps most of all Judy loves the children’s garden: “I never had this when I was growing up so really, it is for me.” GET THIS LOOK Dining in: pendant lights by Tom Dixon Room to grow: upper floors were remodelled, attic room floors dropped for height Three tiers: view out to versatile garden Project architect: Natalie Benes (stiffandtrevillion.com) Sliding doors to garden: from finelinealuminium.com W20 Crittall doors and fixed screens: D&R Design (dandrdesign.co.uk) Oak multilayer engineered board: parquet-flooring.co.uk Athens grey marble in library, black travertine in bathroom: from thestone collection.co.uk 3034 bronze door knobs: by Frank Allart (allart.co.uk) Builder: Jon Loveday (lovedayconstruction.com) Joiner: Conor Manning (manningbespoke.ie) Triple pendant Beat lamps in black, in cinema room; Flask pendants over dining table: all from tomdixon.net Hooked lamp in library: by Buster+Punch (busterandpunch.com) Globe blown glass pendants in bathroom: from hollowaysofludlow.com Kitchen: by Pedini, at pedinilondon. co.uk Pure linen voile curtains: JAB Anstoetz (jab-uk.co.uk) or from Design Centre Chelsea Harbour (dcch.co.uk) 30 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Outdoors homesandproperty.co.uk with Grow roses — you know it makes scents From fruity to fresh, fill your garden with the sublime fragrance of gorgeous blooms Fruity beauty: Lady Emma Hamilton, right, carries the distinct fragrance of pear, grape and citrus Pattie Barron A HOWARD RICE MARIANNE MAJERUS DOZEN long-stemmed red roses for Valentine’s Day is all very well, but where is the fragrance? No production-line rose raised in a plastic tunnel can compete with the romantic thrill of the perfume from a rose grown in your garden — provided, of course, you choose the right one. If you are buying from the garden centre now — and this is a good time to get them into the ground, while they are dormant — many of the old roses and shrub roses are best bets. You can still get your fragrance fix if you are short on space by growing shrub roses in big tubs, using soil-based compost. The trick is to avoid made-to-measure patio and miniature roses which have little or no fragrance. Robert Calkin, notable perfume “nose” and former perfume lecturer, is fragrance consultant to David Austin Roses and, a keen rose grower himself, has the tricky task of describing for the catalogue the various fragrance attributes of each rose. “A rose’s fragrance should have a simplicity of character but the composition should be complex,” he says. Some roses, for instance, carry notes of myrrh, not the myrrh of the Bible, but Myrrhis odorata, or sweet cicely, which has distinctive anise-scented foliage. So if you like the smell of fennel, Calkin suggests Austin’s first rose, deep pink Constance Spry, as well as a more recent descendant, softer pink Scepter’d Isle. Calkin even differentiates between the fragrance of petals and stamens in certain roses. Wild Edric, like all the tough rugosa roses including the outstanding magenta Roseraie de l’Hay, has a wonderfully rich, old rose fragrance, but he points out that the petals also carry hints of watercress and cucumber, while the stamens are pure clove. Either way, you are guaranteed a sublime perfume. Some roses offer more of a full bouquet. Summer Song, a short, bushy shrub with cupped burnt orange flowers that is perfect for pots, has the scent, says Calkin, of a florist’s shop, mingled with chrysanthemum leaves, ripe bananas and tea. Petite and pretty Rosemoor’s blush-pink rosette flowers offer a frisky fragrance: old rose, with hints of apple, cucumber and violet leaf. Today’s roses — hybrid teas, shrubs — are bred from the original tea roses imported from China, and they did smell strongly of black tea. Modern musk hybrids, soft yellow Charlotte, rich peach Port Sunlight and deep magenta Young Lycidas — voted most fragrant in US rose trials last year — all Clockwise from left: Scepter’d Isle carries the distinctive scent of anise; potted Princess Alexandra has hints of tea, lemon and blackcurrant; Summer Song smells like a florist’s shop; Munstead Wood’s colour reflects its rich fragrance of dark berries; Port Sunlight offers a classic tea rose perfume O For outdoor events this month, visit homesandproperty.co.uk/events carry that fabulous tea rose fragrance, but if you like a smoky tang to your tea, Calkin recommends the divine butteryellow Graham Thomas, which has a definite whiff of Lapsang Souchong. The fruity notes in David Austin’s English roses derive from that original tea fragrance. I’m a fool for Lady Emma Hamilton, a beauty with unusually vibrant tangerine blooms that carry a potent perfume redolent of the most delicious fruit salad. Calkin describes it more precisely as a strong, fruity fragrance with hints of pear, grape and citrus fruits. If you, too, favour fruityscented roses, you will love apricot-yellow Jude the Obscure, with notes of guava, citrus and sweet white wine, and Munstead Wood, renowned for its perfume of old rose with notes of blackberry, damson and blueberry that underscore the lush velvety crimson of the full blooms. T HE ancient Damask roses are the ones used in the perfume industry and one of this group, Quatre Saisons, with clear pink, shaggy flowers receives Calkin’s ultimate accolade: the finest fragrance of any rose. When asked to describe it, he is at a loss but says simply: “If summer sunshine had a smell, that would be it. “At the opening of every term, I’d cut a bloom from my garden, pass it around my students and tell them, ‘If you can create anything as beautiful as this fragrance in your lifetime, you will have achieved something.’” 34 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Property searching homesandproperty.co.uk with A MAZE of small streets and main roads of thundering traffic, a tangle of railway bridges, walls of dazzling street art and at every turn art galleries, cafés, clubs, boutiques and bars — this is the eclectic mix that is Shoreditch, on the north-eastern edge of the City of London. After work and at the weekend, the pubs, bars and clubs are packed with City workers and revellers from across the capital. It’s all a far cry from the early days of Shoreditch’s transformation 30 years ago, when buildings left empty by departing printers and furniture makers were populated by artists looking for cheap space. Then the fashion for loft living took off. Developers bought up former industrial buildings, carving them up into spaces which buyers fitted out themselves, sometimes hiring a fashionable young architectural firm.These were the Shoreditch pioneers and, according to estate agent Nick Karamanlis at Stirling Ackroyd, they are still a force to be reckoned with. “The people who bought in Shoreditch 20 years ago bought very cheaply, and even if they no longer live here, they remain attached to the area and prefer to rent out rather than sell.” So anyone looking to buy rather than rent a home in or near the famed Shoreditch Triangle, bounded by Old Street to the north, Shoreditch High Street to the east and Great Eastern Street to the west, must be prepared to wait. Except, as Karamanlis points out, Shoreditch is entering the next stage of its transformation, with new tower blocks already built, under way or at the planning stage. Some call this the “CanaryWharf-isation” of Shoreditch, claiming it will erase the area’s rougharound-the-edges charm. NEW DEVELOPMENTS The largest proposed development is The Goodsyard, a 10-acre site where Bishopsgate Goodsyard stood until it was destroyed by fire in 1964. The site, next to Shoreditch High Street station, is a joint venture between Hammerson and Ballymore. Seven towers of up to 46 storeys are proposed, with 1,500 new homes, offices, shops, cafés and restaurants, and an elevated two and a half-acre park above the restored Braithwaite viaduct, one of the oldest railway viaducts in the country dating back to the 1830s. Robert Allen from Hammerson says Shoreditch has always been a master of reinvention, and that The Goodsyard’s residential towers will be an extension of Avant-garde Tower in Bethnal Green Road, Principal Tower in Norton Spotlight Shoreditch Choose loft living or cool new Young techies and walk-to-work City staff drawn to this arty, foodie spot will find a new generation of homes. By Anthea Masey Folgate, and planned homes, offices, shops, entertainment and public space at The Stage in Curtain Road. “We are building on Shoreditch’s strengths. We are providing a mix of uses, restoring the heritage, providing new routes through the site and a much-needed new park. There will be office space for young and start-up businesses, building on the success of Tech City and Old Street’s Silicon Roundabout.” Answering criticism that much of the capital’s new housing is bought as trophy assets by overseas investors, Ballymore’s Jon Weston says he wants to build on the trend of people moving back to live in central London. “We are proud of the fact that 96 per cent of homes in the last four schemes we have delivered in Tower Hamlets are occupied.” SHOPS AND RESTAURANTS Green space: The Goodsyard plan will bring homes, offices, cafés and a new park It pays to wander round Shoreditch and discover its hidden-away bars, cafés and independent shops, and most people have their favourites. Long-standing SCP in Curtain Road is popular for furniture and interior accessories, while Labour and Wait in Redchurch Street stocks kitchen and garden paraphernalia with a functional Fifties feel. British designer Ally Capellino in Calvert Avenue is a must for classic, handcrafted handbags, and Present is an independent menswear boutique in Shoreditch High Street. There is no shortage of restaurants, bars and cafés. Top of many people’s list will be Eyre Brothers in Leonard Street, specialising in Spanish and Portuguese food. Neil Borthwick’s pub and restaurant, Merchants Tavern, is in Charlotte Road, while The Clove Club in Shoreditch Town Hall is known for its innovative tasting menu. Other favourites include Rivington Grill in Rivington Street, Queen of Hoxton in Curtain Road, Jamie Oliver’s Fifteen restaurant in Westland Place, Hoi Polloi brasserie at Ace Hotel in To find a home in Shoreditch, visit: homesandproperty.co.uk/shoreditch £2.35 MILLION £1,595,000 £750,000 £420,000 A FOUR-BEDROOM house in Shoreditch High Street, previously a bank, then a pawnshop and now beautifully converted (Fyfe Mcdade). O homesandproperty.co.uk/shorepawn A ONE-BEDROOM flat in Clere Street, in one of Shoreditch’s best warehouse conversions, offers a big open-plan living space. Through Space Station. O homesandproperty.co.uk/clere THIS bright two-bedroom flat in Shacklewell Street is in a gated scheme close to Brick Lane and Columbia Road Flower Market. Through Foxtons. O homesandproperty.co.uk/shacklewell A SPACIOUS two-bedroom flat with an open-plan kitchen area in a quiet block in Pitfield Street, just behind Hoxton Square. Through Tepilo. O homesandproperty.co.uk/hox 35 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 Property searching Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with Right: Fix 126 in Curtain Road. Shoreditch is packed with cool cafés, bars and restaurants CHECK THE STATS ■WHAT HOMES COST BUYING IN SHOREDITCH (Average prices) One-bedroom flat £657,000 Two-bedroom flat £884,000 Three-bedroom flat £981,000 Left: stunning street art in Grimsby Street. Far left: Brick Lane, for shops, restaurants and galleries in E1 Source: Zoopla RENTING IN SHOREDITCH (Average rates) One-bedroom flat £2,070 a month Two-bedroom flat £2,725 a month Three-bedroom flat £3,209 a month Source: Zoopla GO ONLINE FOR MORE O The best schools in and around Shoreditch O The local rental scene O The latest housing developments in the area O The best streets O Where to find open space in Shoreditch O How this area compares with the rest of the UK on house prices O Smart maps to help you plot your property search Right: The Comedy Café Theatre in Rivington Street, Shoreditch Photographs: Graham Hussey towers in the buzzing un-Square Mile Shoreditch High Street, Tramshed for chicken and steak in Rivington Street and Rochelle Canteen daytime restaurant at Arnold Circus. The rooftop bar at Terence Conran’s Boundary hotel in Redchurch Street is an after-work favourite. Local people also rave about the food stalls in Leonard Circus at the junction with Paul Street, with a Netherlandsstyle shared space where pedestrians and cyclists take priority over motore vehicles. Vix Farrar @vixfarrar Beach Blanket Babylon — great food, cool interior, big white space to rent HAVE YOUR SAY SHOREDITCH Wild Flowers Company @ wildflowers_co Ace Hotel café and restaurant angela @londonbdg @LeydenGallery is a wonderful gallery and shop, Albion Café in Boundary Street; Labour and Wait shop Louise Randall @EatMoveBloom It has to be @URCHEEKY on Redchurch Street NEXT WEEK: Earls Court. Do you live there? Tell us what you think @HomesProperty Travel: Old Street station is on the Northern line and Shoreditch is on the East London Overground line, connecting to Canary Wharf with a change at Canada Water. Both are Zone 1 stations and an annual travelcard costs £1,284. Council: Shoreditch falls partly under Hackney borough council, with Band D council tax of £1,297.45; partly under Tower Hamlets, where the charge is £1,184.54, and partly under Islington, where it’s £1,260.87. All three councils are Labour-controlled. For more about Shoreditch, visit homesandproperty.co.uk/spotlightshoreditch F " """""# ! &)%22.%(0&)%"266&.*% *.**&2%3*(!%(6*%%0*% 022(&6%&20&7%"266&.*!%*% -%5%5.5 4 &.*0&7%*&0&%%&,)% &2%2%+-%72 *!%-%72 *%% &&%#0&,%&)%-%72 *%% 2*6%**5 TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE There is art but no fish on the menu at which Shoreditch restaurant? Find the answer at homesandproperty.co.uk/spotlightshoreditch "" at For further information please call or visit 0845 304 1002 www.centraliving.org.uk %2(*%&*% '3*(%%(0&.*!%'&*)%%&%, 66%7&4*%&6 *%,%$!5%%%*%70%2%'&*)%%!%%/5+1%7.&.*%&%$5%7!%5% 51%*%7!%%$5%*2(*%(0&.*%75 40 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Letting on homesandproperty.co.uk with I’m competing with snazzy shoeboxes T HIS is not the best time of year to be looking for new tenants. It has been six weeks since I first placed an ad online for my onebedroom flat, which will be vacant at the end of the month, and I have had just two enquiries. These calls have led to only one viewing, which was a total waste of time as the guy was in and out of the flat in about three and a half seconds, which I thought was a bit rude. The current tenant had gone to a lot of trouble to make the place look nice — she had even lit a few scented candles — and I thought he could have at least feigned a bit of interest, for her sake. The other call was from a young woman who had dropped out of university to have her baby, which was due any day. She intended to live alone with the child but had no job and no obvious means of paying the rent. My heart wanted to give her a break, but my head said I shouldn’t be a fool. After a bit of a tussle with my conscience, I decided not to waste her time or mine showing her the flat. I know that might seem heartless but I just couldn’t risk the worst-case scenario of this mother-to-be failing to pay the rent and me being forced Best man speech Victoria Whitlock realises it’s time to drop the rent or stage a makeover for her roomy old flat to take on smaller, smarter new builds The accidental landlord to evict her, that would be just horrible. I would rather the property was empty for a few weeks while I try to find a more suitable tenant. It is possible that a local letting agent would be able to drum up more interest in the flat, but those I have spoken to so far admit that the market still hasn’t recovered from the post-Christmas slump, so I might just have to sit tight until demand picks up. One agent I contacted, who has found me tenants in the past, suggested I drop the rent to just below what I was getting two years ago. She said that, despite media reports to the contrary, rents in my area have been falling over the past few months. Looking at asking prices for similar properties on top websites including Zoopla, I think she is right. This might be something to do with the fact that quite a few new apartment blocks have sprung up since the last time my property was on the market, including a rather snazzy complex right across the road. These new builds have smartened up the area a little, which is good, but there suddenly appears to be a glut of good-quality accommodation, which is bound to put pressure on rents. When I compare my period property to these new apartments, it doesn’t look good. My place is much larger — some of these new flats are like shoeboxes — but they have shiny new appliances and swish bathrooms including, in some cases, fancy-pants Rainmaker showers and so forth. Some of the new blocks even have porters. I realise that I am going to have to smarten up my flat a little if I am going to compete on rent, or I can leave it as it is but ask for less. I am tempted to go with the latter option as whatever I spend will take years to recoup, but I am worried that I will attract less-desirable tenants if I let £725 A WEEK A smart three-bedroom, two-bathroom house set over three floors and with a big family room is available to rent in Heath Road, SW8, through Hamptons International. O Visit homesandproperty.co.uk/rentheathroad the standard of my property slip. Whatever I decide to do, I will have to act fast if I want to avoid my first void period in 10 years. 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 RINGS for wedding Hmm... Pouty profile pic to the Upload to APP GETTING A DATEfor the in Brought to you by ...CLOSER THAN YOU THINK Rent a 1 - 4 bed home in the former Athletes’ Village Find out mor e at eastvillagelondon.co.uk 42 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property New homes Find intelligent homes in ever-popular Richmond homesandproperty.co.uk with Smart moves By David Spittles FLY into Heathrow and you see why people like to live in the outer reaches of south-west London — the sweeping Thames, the commons and the great green tract of Richmond Park. Despite traffic congestion, for many this is the ideal London location. St Margarets Waterside, above, a scheme of 22 flats by developer Mizen on the banks of the River Crane, a Thames tributary, has views of Old Deer Park and Royal Mid-Surrey Golf Course. New office space for local small businesses is on offer, too. Prices from £395,000. Call 020 8903 2442. A new-build “smart-home” near Richmond town centre, by award-winning Quad architects, has been unveiled. It looks like a classic house from the outside but this modern five-bedroom residence has an “intelligent” system controlling lighting, heating, security and audiovisual treats such as the home cinema. Price £2,695,000. Call estate agent Featherstone Leigh on 020 8940 1575. In on the Acton act ACTON is a sprawling urban mishmash, carved up by train tracks and busy roads, but it is tipped as one of the big Crossrail winners and is already on the rise. Traditionally this area of west London has been packed with young footloose renters rather than firsttime buyers, but this is changing, with new apartment schemes bordering small parks and conservation areas. Sabina Hasanli, 29, was looking for an up-andcoming district with good investment prospects after studying at Cass Business School and starting her career as a procurement specialist. “My job involves a lot of travel in the UK and abroad so good transport links are a priority.” She bought a one-bedroom flat at Acton Gardens, above and left, an ambitious 43 EVENING STANDARD WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 New homes Homes & Property homesandproperty.co.uk with Marylebone is pushing west Read more: visit our new online luxury section HomesAndProperty.co.uk/luxury MARYLEBONE — now a very high-end address — is expanding at the edges as its residential renewal gathers momentum. Buyers are pushing west past Baker Street and east of Great Portland Street, blurring the border with Fitzrovia. Tucked away in Clay Street are five modern townhouses, right, thoughtfully designed by young architectural firm Piercy & Company, whose priority was to bring natural light into the homes and provide flexible space. Set over four storeys, each home has an internal glass-walled lightwell and an integral garage. Prices from £3.8 million. Call Druce on 020 7935 6535 for more information. GO EAST VICTORIA PARK ‘VILLAGE’ regeneration project bringing 2,500 homes around a series of squares, courtyards, parks and play areas. By buying, Hasanli, who had been paying £1,600 a month rent, reduced her outgoings by £500 a month. Liberty Quarter, the latest Acton Gardens phase, is made up of apartments and townhouses. Prices from £356,250. Call 020 8993 6923. VICTORIA PARK in east London has acquired “village” status due to the cluster of independent shops, bars and eateries that have sprung up around Lauriston Road. Who would have guessed a Ginger Pig butchers and a Burberry outlet store would pop up here in the Hackney heartland? The area boasts some of the borough’s finest houses and best primary schools, making it ideal for families. For many, it remains a leafy secret, just far enough away from the hard urban face of Stratford but close enough to benefit from all the new amenities and infrastructure resulting from the London 2012 Olympics. Right in the middle of the village is The Victoria Park Collection comprising five townhouses and a mews house. Prices from £750,000. Call estate agent Currell on 020 7266 6611. Park Apartments at Cadogan Terrace is a new-build block directly overlooking the park. The lessenticing rear of the building faces on to the roaring Blackwell Tunnel Approach Road. Homes have up to Village hub: thriving Lauriston Road four bedrooms. Prices from £405,000. Call Thomson Currie on 020 7226 0000. 46 WEDNESDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2015 EVENING STANDARD Homes & Property Inside story homesandproperty.co.uk with Dry January’s SO over — let’s drink to brisk business MONDAY Unlike some of my more puritanical colleagues I didn’t do dry January — quite frankly I couldn’t face it during the gloomiest part of the London winter — but it has still been a very successful business start to the year. I spend this afternoon with a Swissbased businessman who has expressed interest in one of the developments we are marketing in Victoria, with 55 Manhattan-style loft apartments. He’s a man of few words but he seems very clued-up and keeps me on my toes. TUESDAY I pick up again with the same buyer and visit another three developments in various parts of the city. After two meetings and a few hours together his initial reserve is softening. I learn about his business interests and his son, who is beginning a course of study in a boarding school out of town — hence the father’s desire to get a flat in London. Unfortunately, I can’t offer him anything that matches his exact requirements and he feels he has something better elsewhere, so for now, I move on to the next client. Later I meet few properties we have been discussing, so I arrange a car to take us to view a number of options I know will appeal to her. She is particularly impressed by a very grand and quintessentially London building near Tower Bridge which is being converted into luxury homes. Once outside she thanks me for my time, tells me she will be in touch once she lands in Los Angeles, and is whisked away in a chauffeur-driven black Mercedes. Diary of an estate agent some very friendly Scottish-based buyers who are spending so much time, and money in hotels, they have decided to buy a pied-à-terre. They are struggling with the prospect of spending the same amount of money on a two-bed room flat in London as they would on a beautiful lochside landscaped estate in the Highlands. After a lot of searching I have identified a few good options. Following much deliberation they make an offer on a flat in Westminster which is accepted by my client, to everybody’s delight. WEDNESDAY A very prestigious development in Kensington is in my book for a visit today. It is in the latter stages of building so we are able to go into specific units by appointment. However, the FRIDAY prospective buyer, who is a very elegant and no-nonsense Middle Eastern matriarch, is less than amused when she learns she will have to wear previously used steel-toed boots and a hard hat, and climb several flights of stairs. There is nothing else for it, so we begin our upward journey but once inside the fifth-floor, west-facing apartment THURSDAY I am looking forward to a day in the office to do some much-needed admin. However, as soon as I sit down I get a call from the Swiss-based businessman who asks if we could meet for lunch to go over an investment proposition he has been given. He says he trusts my advice, which is very gratifying. Intrigued, I agree to meet him at Como Lario, an Italian restaurant in Holbein Place off Sloane Square. Over lunch he explains that he is no longer proceeding with the apartment he mentioned to me on Tuesday, outlines the new proposition and asks for my opinion. I advise against it, outlining my reasons and he grins when I guess at who brought the property to him. We discuss another deal and I return to my office to put together an offer. It’s a good end to a good week — which certainly merits a drink. A surprise phone call comes in for me from a very glamorous Shanghai-based lady who looks after her family’s investment portfolio outside of China. She is in town for the day and wants to see a O Adam Simmonds is an associate in Strutt & Parker’s London residential development and investment team (020 7318 4688). filled with afternoon sunlight, a rare smile appears on her face.
© Copyright 2024