Estate Agents In York

Friday, July 12, 2019

MPs demand investigation of ‘fake signatures’ claims

Alleged forgery at banks led to people being evicted from homes, say campaigners

The UK’s National Crime Agency and the Financial Conduct Authority have been called on to investigate allegations that bank workers faked signatures on court documents to recover debts and repossess homes.

MPs on the Commons Treasury select committee have written to the two bodies to request they review evidence gathered by campaigners.

Continue reading...

from Property | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2LLdak2
via IFTTT

Park homes: cheaper than bricks and mortar, but not trouble free

Loved by pensioners, mobile housing is also fraught with rogues who prey on residents

Downsizing to a park home sounds like the ideal move for cash-strapped pensioners. Retirees can swap urban life for a quieter one in the countryside or by the sea, surrounded by people in the same age group.

Park homes are much cheaper than traditional bricks and mortar – you can buy one for less than £100,000 in most areas of the country. However, the UK park home industry has a reputation for being run by “distinctly shady characters with considerable powers”, as Sebastian O’Kelly, founder of the Leasehold Knowledge Partnership campaign group, puts it.

Continue reading...

from Property | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2l84edd
via IFTTT

Let’s move to Whitley Bay, Tyne and Wear: it has maintained its pride and beauty

Despite a dose of that dubious urban medicine ‘regeneration’, it seems to be thriving

What’s going for it? The trouble with British seaside resorts, if reports are to be believed, is that they fall into two camps: ruined, despairing and utterly beyond all hope, or Whitstable. If you spend time visiting every prom, pier, amusement arcade, instant doughnut purveyor, rock shop and groyne in the country, as I do (everyone needs a hobby), you will know the truth is more complex. Whitley Bay, for instance, while having suffered the usual despond when we all started jetting off to Benidorm, maintained its pride and, importantly, its beauty. There are few finer, or fresher, walks than along the cliff edge between Tynemouth and St Mary’s lighthouse. The path-cum-prom twists and turns past low, craggy cliffs, soft sands and wild waters on one side, and fine Victorian terraces, pleasant cafes and municipal verges on the other, stopping in for a mooch in the charity shops and independent stores of Park View and finishing up with a crab sarnie at the restored and stupendous Spanish City, of Dire Straits fame (pop culture reference there for the kids). Whitley Bay has had a dose of that dubious urban medicine “regeneration”, but seems to be thriving. Legions of social media executives haven’t downsized here from Jesmond in Newcastle, and you’re not tripping over public art/artists every five metres.

The case against Precious little. It’s a delight. You’ve got to withstand the occasional wind straight outta Siberia, but that goes with the territory.

Continue reading...

from Property | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2LOFIch
via IFTTT

Let’s move to Whitley Bay, Tyne and Wear: it has maintained its pride and beauty

Despite a dose of that dubious urban medicine ‘regeneration’, it seems to be thriving

What’s going for it? The trouble with British seaside resorts, if reports are to be believed, is that they fall into two camps: ruined, despairing and utterly beyond all hope, or Whitstable. If you spend time visiting every prom, pier, amusement arcade, instant doughnut purveyor, rock shop and groyne in the country, as I do (everyone needs a hobby), you will know the truth is more complex. Whitley Bay, for instance, while having suffered the usual despond when we all started jetting off to Benidorm, maintained its pride and, importantly, its beauty. There are few finer, or fresher, walks than along the cliff edge between Tynemouth and St Mary’s lighthouse. The path-cum-prom twists and turns past low, craggy cliffs, soft sands and wild waters on one side, and fine Victorian terraces, pleasant cafes and municipal verges on the other, stopping in for a mooch in the charity shops and independent stores of Park View and finishing up with a crab sarnie at the restored and stupendous Spanish City, of Dire Straits fame (pop culture reference there for the kids). Whitley Bay has had a dose of that dubious urban medicine “regeneration”, but seems to be thriving. Legions of social media executives haven’t downsized here from Jesmond in Newcastle, and you’re not tripping over public art/artists every five metres.

The case against Precious little. It’s a delight. You’ve got to withstand the occasional wind straight outta Siberia, but that goes with the territory.

Continue reading...

from Home And Garden | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2LOFIch
via IFTTT

Thursday, July 11, 2019

Homes with their own lodges – in pictures

From an ancient pile in East Sussex to a Grade II-listed building in Bath, homes worth hunting for

Continue reading...

from Property | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2xLzUrM
via IFTTT

Top tips for taking on a property project Nottingham Estate Agents

If you’ve ever been tempted by the prospect of a property that needs work – a lot of work – you’ll know that rush of excitement. And that feeling of trepidation. But the rewards can be great. ‘You’ve got to have nerves of steel to get stuck in,’ says Edward Hartshorne, Managing Director of Blenkin & […]

The post Top tips for taking on a property project appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



from OnTheMarket.com blog https://ift.tt/2YOSWcT
via IFTTT

Country diary: this castle could never be English – unlike the wildlife

Vänerskärgården, Sweden: If the cranes seem the most exotic birds here, that will change as they are returned to Britain

Built on a promontory at Lake Vänern, Läckö Castle is a baroque confection of whitewashed walls and red-roofed domes and turrets, a vivid contrast to the grey stone fortresses of Northumberland. Within its high walls, its English gardener, Simon Irvine, grows salad crops in sensuous waving curves to show the beauty of vegetables. From the track to the castle I breathe in the strong sweet orange scent of Philadelphus from rounded white clouds of bushes. A yellowhammer calls from deep in a rose thicket, a summer sound among scented arcs of pink flowers.

Continue reading...

from Property | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NN7J6L
via IFTTT