Spatially displaced demand and the changing geography of house prices in London, 1995 - 2006.
Language: English Series: Housing Studies ; 24(3) May 2009, 301-320Publication details: 2009Subject(s): Summary: Discusses the effects of increasing high incomes and gentrification in inner London on the home ownership market. Examines the average London house price by borough, finding that the top-priced boroughs remain the highest priced and the lowest-priced boroughs remain at the bottom over the entire period. One change is noted: the gap between between the highest average price and the lowest average price has closed. Considers explanations for these changes.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | L147747 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 147747-1001 |
Discusses the effects of increasing high incomes and gentrification in inner London on the home ownership market. Examines the average London house price by borough, finding that the top-priced boroughs remain the highest priced and the lowest-priced boroughs remain at the bottom over the entire period. One change is noted: the gap between between the highest average price and the lowest average price has closed. Considers explanations for these changes.