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Land Registry fraud line helps thousand protect their homes
The UK’s Land Registry’s fraud line has helped thousands to protect their home ownership against property fraudsters in its first three years. Nearly 3,000 calls and emails have been received as people become more aware of the risk of someone stealing their identity in order to sell or take out a mortgage on their home before disappearing with the money. ‘Since we launched our property fraud line property owners have become more aware of the risk. We urge home owners to follow our advice to reduce their risk of falling victim to property fraud,’ said Alasdair Lewis, director of Legal Services at the Land Registry. ‘Whilst no system can eradicate fraud completely, since September 2009 we have stopped 199 fraudulent applications on properties worth around £82 million,’ added Lewis. The properties most vulnerable to property fraud are usually empty, tenanted or mortgage-free. Individuals at a higher risk of fraud include owners who do not live in the property because they live abroad, buy to let landlords, people in long term hospital or residential care or where a relationship has broken down. Lewis gave an example of a recent case. Penny Hastings called Land Registry’s property fraud line after becoming suspicious that someone had fraudulently sold a property which she owned and rented out. It turned out the tenant was part of a fraud ring. Once he’d rented Penny’s house using a false identity, he and an accomplice put the house on the market. The accomplice was a lady who had changed her name to Penelope Hastings by deed poll and then secured a passport in that name. ‘The Land Registry did not register the sale as we suspected a fraud. This meant that Penny Hastings still maintains the legal ownership of the property. Unfortunately, an unwitting buyer paid £1.35 million for the property. The police are currently investigating the fraud,’ said Lewis. The property fraud line was launched in February 2013 for owners to quickly alert Land Registry if they are concerned their property might be subject to a fraudulent sale or mortgage. It forms part of Land Registry’s ongoing fraud prevention and detection techniques to safeguard people’s registered properties. Callers can speak to specially trained staff for practical guidance about what to do next. The telephone number is 0300 006 7030 and the line is open from 8.30am to 5pm Monday to Home owners can protect their property by signing up for the Land Registry’s free Property Alert service to receive an email alert when there is certain activity on the monitored property such as an application to register a new mortgage. People can then judge whether the activity is suspicious and seek further advice if necessary. Lewis pointed out that those who become an innocent victim of fraud and suffer a financial loss as a consequence may be compensated. If your property isn’t registered then no compensation is payable. There can be up to three addresses on the register including an… Continue reading
Concerns voiced about lack of flood awareness among UK home owners
With the UK in the middle of yet another storm with high winds there are calls for a new approach to home building on flood plains and an increase in awareness for home owners. Land agent Aston Mead believes that the country needs to get rid of the notion that sand bags can prevent homes from being flooded and instead adopt a radically different approach. The call comes as new survey reveals that one in three home owners are unaware whether their home is on a flood plain or not. Almost 10,000 homes a year are built on floodplains, with an average of one new home in every 14 constructed on land that has a significant chance of flooding, either from a river or the sea. Aston Mead director Richard Watkins said that flood prevention should be at the core of construction on floodplains. ‘We can’t go on treating flooding as an afterthought. Instead, we should be building properties which are specifically designed to rise and fall with the flood water. The technology is already available out there, all we have to do is make best use of it,’ he explained. He points to designs for homes which are built on top of a pre-cast pontoon sitting inside an excavated concrete void. As flood water enters the void, the pontoon rises, guided by vertical rails which can be hidden within walls and chimney breasts. As the floodwater recedes, the house returns to its original position, with a pump removing any excess water. Access is available at all times using an articulated pathway, and services remain connected using a system of flexible knuckle joints. ‘This system is completely scalable, and designs of properties can range from the very traditional to the highly contemporary, with the footprint of the floating pontoon extending beyond the building itself to include garages, terraces and gardens,’ Watkins pointed out. ‘The pontoons can also be used as fully habitable basements and there are few limitations to size, design or even the number of storeys that can be added on top. An additional advantage is that as water fills the void, it reduces the amount of flood water passing onto neighbouring properties,’ he said. ‘These buildings can be mortgaged on standard terms by most lenders and they also qualify for standard household insurance despite being on the floodplain. What’s more, if they are also fitted with grey water recycling and photo-voltaic panels, they can remain fully functional safe havens even in the worst flooding conditions,’ he added. Recent Met Office figures revealed that December 2015 was the wettest month ever recorded in the UK, with almost twice the amount of average rainfall and more storms hit the country in January and already in February. ‘Resorting to a supply of sandbags in the garage just in case is no longer good enough. We can’t continue fighting… Continue reading
Canary Wharf set to see strongest office rental growth in central London this year
Canary Wharf is set to have the strongest central London office rental growth in 2016 with an increase of 12.8%, followed by Shoreditch at 10% and Midtown at 9.6%, according to a new analysis. Affordability is the main driver for rents to increase, along with the development of Crossrail, integrating Canary Wharf with the rest of central London, and a general shortage of available offices across London, says the Knight Frank report. This will push tenants seeking high quality affordable offices eastwards, with Canary Wharf well placed to benefit. Expansion by Technology and Creative firms will contribute to the shift, as they are growing fast and increasingly seeking larger offices, it explains. It also says that Shoreditch’s increase in office rents will principally be driven by technology sector expansion. The more mature, established heavy weight tech firms have firmly established a London rival for California’s Silicon Valley in the area, which is set to continue to grow over the next 12 months. Indeed, the technology sector was the largest source of demand for office space in central London in 2015, for the fifth consecutive year, and rents in Shoreditch grew by nearly 24% in 2015, nearly double the 12% increase seen in the neighbouring City Core which is London’s traditional financial district. Moreover, at £65.00 per square foot, rents in Shoreditch have closed the gap on the City Core rents which stood at £70 per square foot at the end of the fourth quarter of 2015. In 2007, Shoreditch rents were £42.50 per square foot, about a third less than the City Core at £63.50 per square foot. Central London vacancy rate levels are at a 14 year low, the report also shows, the lowest since the first quarter of 2001, with the West End at 3.4%, the lowest since 1989. ‘The gap between rents in traditional core areas and other sub-markets has never been so small. Occupiers are making decisions based on quality of product and amenity, availability of scale, adjacency of workforce and not by postcode,’ said Dan Gaunt, head of City Leasing at Knight Frank. According to James Roberts, Knight Frank chief economist, what has surprised everyone is that Shoreditch office rents have got so close to those of the City Core. ‘Everyone assumed the tech firms could not afford rents that high,’ he said. ‘However, the more successful start-ups from five or six years ago have matured into larger, established companies with deeper pockets. They now need bigger, modern, high quality offices, and they can afford to pay to get what they want. It’s what happened in Silicon Valley but there the process took decades, in Shoreditch it has happened in a few years,’ he added. Continue reading