The 2023 London property trends barometer: from mega discounts on mega-mansions to the quirkiest auctions

The 2023 London property trends barometer: from mega discounts on mega-mansions to the quirkiest auctions

Cigar terraces and mowing the lawn is out, but scandal and solar windows are in

India Block2 minutes ago

The property and interiors trends we will be taking into 2024, and the ones we will leave firmly behind us.

HOT

Wacky auctions

Grain Tower went for a hammer price of £159,000
Savills

All sorts of weird and wonderful structures went under the hammer in 2023.

A 150-year-old Victorian boathouse in Teddington achieved a hammer price of £537,000, while a former convent in Chelsea sold after the nuns moved out and it was listed with a guide price of £50 million.

For lovers of abandoned buildings with sea views there were a plethora of properties, including: a Grade II listed post Napoleonic Welsh fortress (guide price £190,000); a mid-19th century gun tower on the Thames off the coast of Kent (hammer price £159,000); a First World War watch tower on Tyneside converted into a three-bedroom home (offers over £500,00); and a beachside Sixties radar training station in Fleetwood (guide price £50,000).

For any Grand Designs hopefuls looking for a project there is a water tower in Perry up for auction (guide price £350,000).

Planet-hugging houses

Hempcrete walls helped this Hackney home renovation up its sustainability credentials
James Retief

Climate anxiety was a watchword for many this year, with a London Councils survey this in September reporting that 84 per cent of Londoners are concerned about climate change.

Enter eco homes.

Vegan chef Dora Taylor and her community gardener partner Danny Hubbard worked with Cairn Architects to create a Hackney kitchen extension that was the first UK project to use LC3 limestone, which generates up to 40 per cent less CO2 than industry standard Portland Cement.

They also used carbon-sequestering Hempcrete for some of the walls and cork insulation.

Along with a cross-laminated timber frame, its central atrium uses natural stack ventilation to cool the house in summer.

The Maison du Convenience

Houses for the other woman were the steamiest of hot property in 2023
Tumisu /Pixabay

Scandal was alive and well this year.

The practice of discreetly buying a home to house one’s mistress in lived on among the wealthy in 2023.

“I found myself entangled in a clandestine affair of luxury real estate, cloaked in secrecy by the shadows of a hush-hush NDA,” revealed Yasmin Ulhaq at Glenfield Property Management.

“Picture this: a husband on the hunt for a discreet abode, not for business or leisure, but for his mistress and their little secret.”

It’s a long and storied tradition, as evidenced by a £25 million townhouse that came on the market with Wetherell in Mayfair. In the 18th century, the site was occupied by the house of Maria Fitzherbert, the high society mistress of George IV.

Postcode curtain-twitching

Richmond won the postcode wars this year, at least in terms of happiness
Adrian Lourie

Richmond was voted the happiest place to live in the UK by residents, while Hillingdon was named the least happy.

Kensington & Chelsea took the title of least affordable borough to buy in (no surprises there), while Croydon was crowned the most affordable.

Meanwhile, rents rose fastest in W8 and NW7 while N18 and N9 offered the cheapest rents in town — because £755 a month for a room counts as cheap now.

Blowing Hot and Cold:

Renting trap

2023 was the year of record-breaking rent rises
Barabara Gibson

Record-breaking rents were hot, tenants’ budgets were not.

With spiking interest rates and the attendant mortgage rates rises, Londoners locked out of buying have been renting for longer.

Combined with a lack of rental homes on the market, competition between hopeful tenants has been growing fiercer. Even once you secured that contract, the nightmare wasn’t over.

It’s no wonder that first-time buyers are taking over as the major buying group in many boroughs as people scramble to escape from renting.

Influencer interiors overload

The Ultrafragola Mirror/Lamp by Ettore Sottsass inspired a thousand copycats
Trevor Patt

This could be wishful thinking, but perhaps 2023 was the year we reached peak social media interior.

The over-saturation of trends has made scrolling for inspo boring. The ever-tightening trends cycle means it’s mere weeks, if not days, between something gaining popularity and a cheap fast furniture option hitting online shop shelves.

Even the DIY maximalist corner of social media became a self-defeating ouroboros when one mega-popular DIY influencer accused another content creator of stealing her ideas for using her DIY guides to, uh, do it herself.

NOT

Full price mega mansions

The Holme a grand mansion on edge boating lake Regents Park London
With its £250 million price tag, The Holme failed to find a buyer in 2023
Alamy Stock Photo

The ultra wealthy had to readjust their expectations this year and slash millions off the asking price for their mega mansions.

Discounts of multiple millions were designed to attract buyers during a slow season for prime London property, with sale prices down 2.1 per cent according to Savills.

“Consumer confidence has been incredibly delicate, and it has been hard for owners of prime central London properties to reconcile the difference between their expectations on price and where buyers consider the market to be,” said Cliff Gardiner at BHHS London.

Some of London’s most expensive homes went unsold this year, including The Holme (£250 million) and 2-8a Rutland Gate (£210 million).

Agents were able to secure discounts on prime locations, such as almost £300,000 knocked off a Marylebone mansion flat with an asking price of over £2 million.

“We made the bid and let it sit there,” said Camilla Dell, founder of Black Brick Property Solutions. “It sometimes takes sellers a long time to get to grips with the realities of the market. Months later the agent called me and accepted the offer.”

London property saw house prices fall after years of growth, with sellers having to accept it’s currently a buyers’ market — the super-rich, they’re just like us.

Mowing the lawn

Put down those hedge trimmers — manicured gardens are out in favour of something closer to nature
Juliet Murphy

A home with outdoor space was the dream during the height of lockdowns, but agents are reporting that would-be buyers are actively put off by gardens.

“The biggest trend I have observed this year,” said director of Tedworth Property Simon Tollit, “is a move away from town houses with outside space, in favour of flats in period blocks and garden squares.”

A property on a garden square would come with access to a communal green space, which suggests it isn’t the greenery so much as the maintenance required.

Mowing the lawn was definitely out, agreed Marc Sheiderman, director of Arlington Residential, who saw “the rise in buyers who don’t want manicured, contrived gardens”.

Instead, people wanted “something more natural and wild”.

As well as a drain on time and resources, grassy lawns are terrible for the environment. They’re rubbish for biodiversity, can leech pesticides into the environment, need a large amount of water to remain green in increasingly hot summers, and mowing them generates way more carbon than is offset by that captured in the turf.

Hopefully in 2024 we’ll be reporting on the meteoric rise of the clover lawn and wildflower garden.

Home improvements

Renovations were out of most people's budgets in 2023
Karl Solano/Unsplash

Dreams of acquiring a wreck and turning it into your dream home became more of a nightmare in 2023, as the rising cost of building materials (thanks, pandemic supply chain issues and global conflict) and the scarcity of skilled labour and tradespeople (thanks, Brexit and increasingly hostile immigration policies) made renovations both eye-wateringly expensive and a logistical headache.

“Clients are all looking for a turnkey option,” reports Rihanne McIlroy of Middleton Advisor’s prime central London office. “[Only] one in six are happy to do even basic cosmetic work.”

These costs make doing up on a property in the hope of turning a profit when selling it on dramatically less likely, while those stuck in too-small homes have to take a huge financial hit if they need an extension.

“Properties which need updating or any form of renovation are sticking around for a considerable time unless they are priced to reflect the aggravation and increased costs of a refurbishment project,” said Gardiner.

For the super-wealthy, home renovations are still within budget, but their requests are less flashy.

“Gone are the cigar terraces and the enormous dining rooms,” said Alex Michelin, chief executive of Valouran.

“In are spas, cryotherapy chambers and meditation spaces, and a near obsessional focus on the bedroom, the one space that can deliver the commodity prized by successful people above all others — quality sleep.”