Databank residential and regeneration
Language: English Series: Property Week ; 71(11) 17 March 2006, 54(1)Publication details: 2006Subject(s): Summary: There is a predicted decrease in urban land prices in 2006. It is argued that this is related to the quality of the land and of the building materials used. New developments have been built out of the same unit raw material and this is heavily dependent on building flats. However, this is likely to decline in the next few years in favour of high-density family houses. Demographic evidence indicates that there is a big difference between the theoretical residual value of land, based on house prices, and the impact on that residual of both increased density and a rise in the average value of new-build property.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Archive | London Journal article | L132900 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 132900-1001 |
There is a predicted decrease in urban land prices in 2006. It is argued that this is related to the quality of the land and of the building materials used. New developments have been built out of the same unit raw material and this is heavily dependent on building flats. However, this is likely to decline in the next few years in favour of high-density family houses. Demographic evidence indicates that there is a big difference between the theoretical residual value of land, based on house prices, and the impact on that residual of both increased density and a rise in the average value of new-build property.