Location: South West
London’s house price to earnings ratio hits all-time high
House prices in the capital are now 14.5 times average earnings, says Hometrack, 42% higher than the long-term average...
The average home in a national park is 46% more expensive than the surrounding county – but which one park offers a price discount?
The New Forest is the most expensive national park to buy a home in (averaging £581,448) and Snowdonia is the most affordable (£180,126), according to some updated research by Lloyds Bank.
Letter from the Country: Why today’s agents have to go beyond the call of duty
It's not all doom and gloom, but helping clients to find their perfect property is harder than it has ever been, says Jamie Freeman
‘Housing policy inertia puts brakes on 2018 price growth’
Jackson-Stops predicts little movement for property markets next year
Heaton & Partners grows its team in the Cotswolds
Bertie Cassels joins the buying agency to cover Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire
Greeks Bearing Gifts: Nicholas Revett, Trafalgar Park & the origins of UK neo-classicism
Matthew Beckett traces the lineage of one of our most recognisable and important architectural styles back to a small vestibule in the north wing of a £12m Wiltshire masterpiece...
Bristol flying high as ‘UK’s fastest property market’
On average, it takes a mere 34 days to find a buyer in the West Country hotspot
Underground Films: How video can take basement conversions to new heights
It's been a big few weeks for subterranean development stories, with 'icebergs' making the news 'neath Kensington Palace Gardens, Brompton Square, and even Kensington Palace.
Banksy strikes again: Basquiat, graffiti, and the issue of copyright law
The iconic street artist is back, opening a spraycan full of issues for the City of London Corporation...
Seven-figure sums: How many square feet does £1m buy across Britain?
The number of £1m+ homes in Britain has more than doubled in the last ten years, says Savills
The Value of Heritage: Why historic buildings are vital to the future of the economy
The heritage sector directly contributed £11.9bn to the economy in the last year, says Historic England