All Property Week articles in 26 August 2022 – Page 3
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Insight
Housing market braced for downturn as price rises stall
Demand for housing remains strong but the increasing cost of living is predicted to affect affordability
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Professional
Agent P: school holidays
Friday 26 August, 9am, Titanic room: GBH Towers 20% full at best. Fred on the door says the missing are mostly staff with kids, facing a weekend of airport hell tracking back from the Costa Brava or Corsica at the fag-end of the school hols. “Serves ‘em right,” he chuckles. ...
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News
Community-led masterplan rivals developer Acorn for future of Frome
A social enterprise has locked horns with commercial developer Acorn Property Group over the future of a town in Somerset, after its rival masterplan was approved by the local council.
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News
Railpen enters Oxford with £29m life sciences buy
Investment manager Railpen has entered the Oxford market, buying life science asset Eastpoint Business Park for £29m from AEW.
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Professional
This week in... 2017
ITV submitted plans for a new 300,000 sq ft global HQ building, to replace its existing studios complex on London’s South Bank.
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News
Savills assembles 190 lots as auctions resume in September
The next sale, which includes 35 commercial properties, will allow for completions to be concluded pre-Q4.
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News
BidX1 partners with Foxtons for September London and Surrey sale
Online auctioneer BidX1 is partnering with estate agent Foxtons for its London and Surrey auction on 1 September. Among the listed lots, all subject to confirmation at the time of writing, are seven with guide prices above £1m.
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Insight
Let’s pray Truss succeeds as PM
So it’s obviously Liz Truss. Unless some extraordinary gaff derails her, the foreign secretary is nailed on as our next prime minister.
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Insight
Freeports key to hydrogen hubs
One of the most abundant elements in the universe, hydrogen, has strong policy support as a key part of the UK’s transition to a net zero future.
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Insight
Freeports start to take shape
These designated tax and custom sites are piquing the interest of developers. Tim Clark reports
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Insight
The force of nature
As biophilic office design comes back into fashion, thanks in no small part to Covid-19, Adam Branson considers the benefits of bringing the outside in.
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Insight
Inflation impact felt far and wide
UK inflation hit 10.1% in July according to the Office for National Statistics – a 40-year high. Once considered endemic to a bygone era in markets, inflation is predicted to exceed 13% later this year, a level few investors will have experienced. The impacts will be felt far and wide ...
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Insight
Rent increase equates to losing a room over the past two years
The two years to July 2022 have seen the fastest rise in rents in at least a decade, according to data compiled by estate agent Hamptons.
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Professional
Delivering mixed-use success
British Land recently secured reserved matters approval for the next phase of its Canada Water Printworks development in London. So, what are some of the planning challenges that need to be addressed to ensure the successful delivery of such large mixed-use projects?
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Insight
What are the options for property companies facing insolvency?
Given the bleak outlook many property companies face, as reports of higher numbers of insolvencies abound, they may feel they have no option but to bow out early and enter liquidation when faced with creditor pressure. But there are other options available.
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Online
Q&A: Smart moves in EV charging provision
Theodorik Leao of electrical specialist GoodWe on EV rules for resi schemes
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Professional
London real estate rocked by electricity capacity shortages
Experts say the ‘absolute horror story’ is down to decades of poor planning and power-hungry data centres
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Professional
Q&A: Five minutes with Louisa Butters, head of retail asset management at CBRE IM UK
Louisa Butters, head of retail asset management at CBRE IM, on how she got started in the property industry and her cultural recommendations.
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Insight
How can developers halt rights-to-light ‘ambulance chasers’?
The Law Commission’s review of rights to light is now almost eight years old, yet there has been no sign of a government response. Reform remains a question of when not if, and as the political merry-go-round spins again, it now seems even further out of reach.
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