Well the fallout from the recent Budget is still continuing.
I was chatting to a couple of people from
the Mid Sussex area the other day, when one said, “There isn’t enough land to
build all these 300,000 houses Philip Hammond wants to build each year”, and if
you read the Daily Mail, you would be forgiven for thinking the Country was at
bursting point: or is it?
It was 60 years ago the first satellite was launched
(Sputnik). All the Superpowers have used them to take high definition pictures
of each other for decades, but now satellites and their high-powered cameras
are being used for more peaceful purposes. The European Environment Agency (EEA)
have been taking high definition pictures of the UK from outer-space to give us
a focused
picture of what every corner of the Country really looks like and the findings will
come as a surprise.
As
my blog readers know, I always like to ask the important questions relating to
the Mid Sussex property market. If you are a Mid Sussex landlord or Mid Sussex homeowner,
this knowledge will enable you to make a more considered opinion on your
direction and future in the Mid Sussex property market. Like every aspect of
all economic life, it’s all about supply and demand, because over the last
twenty or so years, there has been an imbalance in the British (and Mid Sussex)
housing market, with demand outstripping supply. This means the average value
of a property in Mid Sussex has risen by 389.79%, taking an average value from £76,400
in 1995 to £374,200 today.
Using
the information from the EEA and data crunched by Sheffield University with
their Corine-Land Cover
project, I posed them a few
questions about the local area, interesting questions I would like to share
with you.
1.
What proportion of the whole of Mid Sussex is
built on?
10.21%
That
surprised you, didn’t it! In the study, land classified as ‘urban fabric’ defined
has land which has between 50% and 100% of the land surface is built on, (meaning up to a half might be gardens or
small parks, but the majority is built on).
2. How much land is
intensively built on locally?
Of
that amount mentioned above, how much of it is high-density urban fabric? (I.e. where 80% to 100% is built on – still leaving
20% for gardens) 0.17% -
again I bet that surprised you!
3. So how is the
land used locally?
Industry 0.25%
Sports
Facilities 3.29%
Arable
Farmland 24.27%
The
rest being made up of various other types such as forests, pastures and
waterways, etc.
Mid
Sussex and the surrounding areas are greener than you think! In fact, I read
that property covers less of the UK than the land revealed when the tide goes
out. The assumption that vast bands of our local area have been concreted over
doesn't stand up to inspection. However, the effect of housing undoubtedly spreads
beyond its actual footprint, in terms of noise, pollution and roads.
Now
I am not suggesting for one second we concrete over every inch of the locality,
but the bottom line is we, as a country, are growing at a quicker rate than the
households we are building. I appreciate the emotional effect of housing is
greater than other land use types because most of us spend the vast majority of
our time surrounded by it. As Brits, we live our lives driving along roads,
walking on footpaths and working and living in buildings meaning we tend, as a
result, to considerably over-emphasise how much of it there is.
In fact, I
was only flying home recently back from a short break abroad, when I looked
down and I was reminded just how green Britain actually is!
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