The semi-detached house with its bay windows and net curtains has long
been ridiculed as an emblem of safe, lacklustre and desperately uncool suburban
life; the homes of the likes of Hyacinth Bucket in
Keeping up Appearances and more latterly Alan Partridge – but they could have the last laugh
- having enjoyed the highest price growth of any property type in Burgess Hill,
up by an average 421% increase in the last twenty years.
The semi can now laugh in
the face of its posher detached counterpart, which saw a rise of only 385% in
the same 20-year period. Looking at smaller properties, flats/apartments only
rose 376%, whilst terraced houses did better at 406% (although they were
starting from a lower base and demand from buy to let landlords has had a big
part in driving the values on that type of house (i.e. the price a buy to let landlord is prepared to pay is driven by
the rent the landlord can achieve).
In 1996 the average value of a Burgess Hill
semi stood at £69,600,
today it stands at £362,500.
Such is the
attractiveness of semis, which are cheaper than detached houses but have most
of the same benefits for families. Semi-detached houses were built in their
hundreds of thousands by the Victorians and Edwardian's between the wars and
through to the present day. Interestingly in the late 19th Century
and early 20th century – they often weren’t referred to as
semi-detached – but as villas!
So whilst Europeans live on top of each other in apartments us British chose,
in the late Victorian and early Edwardian times, suburban comfort, being near but
not too near, the neighbours! I once heard someone say
the semi-detached house was a peculiar crossbreed that doesn’t stand on its own
— it is inseparable from its neighbour — yet somehow still embodies a dream of
suburban independence.
Over one in four houses in Burgess Hill is a semi-detached
house.
There are 4,178
semi-detached properties in Burgess Hill and they represent 33.91% of all the
households in Burgess Hill. Burgess Hill has such a mix of semi-detached
properties with the older semis to more modern ones built in the last couple of
decades. Especially with the older ones, the semi offered a hall to provided
separation between the reception rooms and privacy for their occupants. Also
the downstairs offered larger rooms to accommodate dining tables, whilst upstairs;
bedrooms were smaller, yet cosy.
However, probably the most
overlooked aspect of popularity for semis is the garden. The front garden,
designed to separate the house from the world, and the back garden designed for
private relaxation. The semi in the suburbs was relaxing, well presented,
plumbed and enhanced by a garden so that when a window was opened the air had a
chance of being genuinely fresh and it’s for all those reasons why 111
semi-detached houses have been sold in Burgess Hill in the last 12 months alone. Still as popular today as they were with the
Victorians all those years ago – some things just stand the test of time!
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