Financial Times Europe - 21.03.2020 - 22.03.2020

(Amelia) #1
21 March/22 March 2020 ★ FTWeekend 3

Royal
Pavilion

Brighton
Palace Pier

Sussex
Square

BRIGHTON


Wykeham
Terrace

mapsnews.com/©HERE

Marine Parade

Brighton

UK


West
Street

 m

Coastal erosion


B


righton estate agents are
reporting a sharp fall in view-
ing numbers as the coronavi-
rus spreads. The pandemic
has added uncertainty to a
local property market that has been
slowing for three years. Prices have held
steady—rising1.7percentin2019—but
in the first 10 months of last year, the
number of sales recorded in Brighton
was 31 per cent lower than in the same
periodin2016.
“Last year was probably one of the
worst recent years for vendors,” says
Lisa Saxena, director of Brighton Prop-
ertyHunter.
The bustling seaside city, a little over
an hour’s train ride from London
Bridge, is popular with tourists and
known for its liberal, bohemian spirit
and nightlife; stag and hen parties are
regular sights on West Street in the city
centreatweekends.Propertybuyersare
drawn by its elegant Georgian architec-
ture with generous proportions and
familyfriendlycommunities.
Brighton hosts cultural and sporting
events throughout the spring and sum-
mer, which culminate in August with
the UK’s largest Pride festival, though
thisyearsomemaybecancelledorpost-
poned. The Brighton marathon, which
was to be held next month, has been put
backuntilSeptember,forexample.
Attracting home buyers this year will
be difficult. Many blame the slow mar-
ket on Brighton’s reliance on buyers
from London. There, sales had fallen
since the Brexit referendum in 2016,

In the centre of Brighton, £250,000
willbuy a one-bedroom flat in a con-
verted Georgian house. A smart two-
bedroom flat near Sussex Square on
the seafront can cost about £400,000
— roughly the same asa family home
on the outskirts of the city.
For £1m, Fine and Country is selling a
three-bedroom Gothic-revival house on
Wykeham Terrace.Higher up the mar-
ket, Mishon Mackay is selling a seven-
bedroom Grade II-listed home by the
seafrontonMarineParadefor£2.75m.
In January, prospects looked brighter
for Brighton’s sellers as confidence
returned following the UK general elec-
tion result. The Conservative Party
majoritybroughtcertaintyontheBrexit
question. “We as a company sold more
properties in January than the entire
last quarter of last year, so this year
compared to last has been night and
day,” says Paul Bott, valuations director
atPaulBott&Company.
Now, at the start of what may be
months of economic uncertainty, that
confidenceislikelytovanishonceagain.

i/B U Y I N G G U I D E


An annual rail season ticket to central
London terminals costs £4,208
The average time a property took to sell in
2016 was 33 days; last year that figure rose
to 59 days
Schools include Brighton College,
Roedean School and BHASVIC
What you can buy for...
£500,000 three-bedroom VictorianA
house moments from the city centre
£1m three-bedroom penthouseA
apartment in Brighton Marina
£2m four-bedroom Grade II-listedA
townhouse overlooking Brighton Beach
More atpropertylistings.ft.com

UK propertyBrighton’s
market, which had been

slowing in recent years, has
been dealt a further blow

by the coronavirus.
By ames MacMahonJ

Homes in Brighton are
cheaper than in London
Average property price (’)









  

London

Brighton and Hove

Source: Land Registry

(Above)
Brighton’s
bohemian,
liberal vibe
appeals to
buyers from
London;
(left) a three-
bedroom
terraced house
on Wykeham
Terrace,
£1m through
Fine & Country
Alamy, Irene Todaro

House Home


housing situations because of the disas-
trous disconnect between wages and
average house prices and rents in the
city,”wrotetheBrightonandHoveCom-
munity Land Trust in an open letter to
the council in January. The trust was
attempting to persuade the authority to
prioritise community housing over pri-
vatedevelopments.

For well-paid buyers who work in
London and who are prepared to com-
mute, prices are still more affordable
than the capital — the average property
price in Brighton and nearby Hove is 23
per cent cheaper than in London,
accordingtotheLandRegistry.
Alex Mackay, managing director at
Mishon Mackay, says that Brighton
attractsplentyofyoungcommuters.
“First-time buyers seem to have been
the ones keeping the market moving,”
saysCrombie.
Amy MacGregor is looking for a one-
bedroom flat in Brighton for about
£250,000. “I’m very aware that this
money would buy a lot more in another
area, but I’m not interested in anywhere
else,” says MacGregor, who is a manager
at the Brighton Fringe festival — which
hasbeenpostponed.

political uncertainty has been a factor.
Before the Brexit referendum, the mar-
ket was “quite buoyant”. But in the past
two years, family homes and properties
at the upper end of the market — those
costing more than £500,000 — have
takenlongertosell.
A more pressing concern may be
affordability. In the past 10 years, the
average property price in Brighton has
increased by 69 per cent, to £398,480,
according to Land Registry data com-
piled by Hamptons. According to the
Office for National Statistics, the
median house price in Brighton and
Hove in 2018 was 11.57 times the
median salary of local residents; in
2002, median prices were just 6.37
timeswages.
“There are thousands of individuals
and families trapped in unsustainable

though had rallied in recent months.
Last year, nearly a fifth of all sales in
Brighton went to buyers from the capi-
tal , according to Hamptons. Nathan
Crombie, director at Belvoir, says that

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