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City looks to buy cheap land from crunch-hit developers



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Published Date: 08 January 2009
EDINBURGH city leaders are preparing to launch a major land grab by buying up land on the cheap from credit-crunch hit developers.
Officials are scouting Edinburgh for potential bargains, with the main focus on the city's waterfront, where land values have fallen by up to three-quarters over the last two years. Land there which cost £2 million an acre 18 months ago, is now said
to be fetching closer to £500,000.

It is hoped that bringing the land under council control will help stimulate stalled development, as well as providing land for more affordable housing.

The city council is in a stronger position because it can borrow money from the Government at preferential rates, whereas private landowners have been badly hit by the slowdown in banks' lending.

This means the local authority is looking to pick up good deals from developers who are struggling with cashflow in the current economic climate.

Officials are working on the details of the scheme to pay for any new housing built on the council-acquired land but it is thought the homes would be a mix of private, rented and shared-equity homes.

This would be in addition to separate plans to build 1100 new council homes unveiled by city leaders last year.

Council chiefs today said they would not buy land for the sake of it, but added the current economic climate did present opportunities for them. As well as the waterfront, sites in West Edinburgh are understood to be among half a dozen targets.

Dave Anderson, the council's city development director, said:

"We are looking at strategic land acquisitions but you have still got to have a reason to buy the land and also a revenue stream to pay back the money you have borrowed.

"If you take the waterfront, the land values have just not held.

"There are some developers who are in a position where they either sell assets to get cash flowing again or wait until the bank manager calls and have to hand over the keys.

"But we want to work with them and affordable housing is our main focus at the moment."

City leaders last year unveiled an economic resilience package designed to steer the city through the global economic downturn.

Among the ideas floated in that package was for the city council to buy empty flats, offer mortgages and provide loans to first-time buyers.

Roy Durie, senior partner with Ryden property consultants, said:

"The problem with land values is that they have dropped by something like 70 per cent in places.

"The issue for the council is that there are still a lot of vultures out there who are also ready to pounce for the bargains."





The full article contains 464 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 08 January 2009 10:19 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Edinburgh Council
 
1

ccc,

08/01/2009 12:15:31
So with land prices falling 70% in some areas, I hope we can expect to see houses selling for ~50% cheaper than they were in 2007.

Otherwise this is just blatant profiteering.

I do also love how the when the council plans to do this it is seen 'helping' out - but when others do it they are 'vultures' !!

As an aside I thought Edinburgh was immune from the property crash ? Land prices 70% down ?!! Surely that must be some mistake. Nobody was predicting that.....

Well actually they were. :)
2

Mallory,

Edinburgh 08/01/2009 12:19:01
I thought the 'council' had already interests in developments around the Waterfront. Presumably the book value of these have also shrunk over the past year along with tghe liklehood of a decent return on our capital's capital from the sale of all those little boxes..

and how much money did the counxcil receive from flogging off land and assets iover th past three years?
3

brandy al,

embra 08/01/2009 12:42:43
And why not,hopefully this will bring the house prices down.
4

Incandescent,

08/01/2009 13:15:47
#1 CCC

You claimed the other day to be offering "free education" about the housing market fall (which of course just happens to provide an ideal opportunity to trumpet "I told you so" again and again).

I doubt there are many, if any posters/readers who have not by now read you're "50%" prediction, so I think it's probably ok for you to stop now.
5

Incandescent,

08/01/2009 13:17:05
#4 "Your", not "you're 50% prediction".
6

antifa,

08/01/2009 13:17:06
"and how much money did the counxcil receive from flogging off land and assets iover th past three years?"

Hopefully a lot. They don't burn it you know.
7

GraemeH,

Edinburgh 08/01/2009 13:34:11
And here was me thinking the council needed to SELL at least £50m of land and other assets to meet the shortfall for the vanity tram line.

left hand / right hand?
8

PaulB,

Edinburgh 08/01/2009 13:37:38
If the council buy up the land at Granton will this mean 'social' housing rather than private housing will be built there? That will dramatically alter the social balance of the area. If I had bought one of the new houses down there, I would be very worried about my future neighbours.
9

ccc,

08/01/2009 16:05:57
#4

I think you are taking me the wrong way. I can see why though.

Youa re right - I am going down the 'told you so route'.

However it is not so much for me - just trying to point out how useless so called 'experts' are when they give the public vested interest spin and lies.

Don't listen to the word an expert has to say - until they have proven themselves.

Why do so many EA chumps get to parade their views in this paper as so called 'experts' ?

Their advice and predictions have been proven to be useless over and over again.

Shouldn't the Scotsman be looking for people who actually know what they are talking about ?

Well yes they would - if they had the interests of the public and news in mind. However we know they have vested interests along with everyone else.

Beware :)
10

Incandescent,

08/01/2009 16:46:50
#10 Namely, advertising revenue from ESPC and EAs.
11

Phil o Brian,

08/01/2009 17:03:27
Why does Edinburgh have to keep growing? Would we not be better with some of the jobs and therefore houses moved to other parts of the country. More expansion just means more traffic etc. Whats this obsession with growth. Does it make the politicians feel BIG?
12

Mr Fuzzy,

Edinburgh 08/01/2009 17:30:49
Councils are required by law to seek out the maximum value of all assets that are to be sold. So they would just hold onto this land until the market recovered, and make a nice profit. In any case, they haven't found any land yet. The insurance companies and pension fund managers are probably doing the same as well.
13

ccc,

08/01/2009 18:26:51
#11

Scandalous !!
14

fair scunnered,

edinburgh 08/01/2009 18:59:51
so the fib dems are going to be land snatchers,carpet baggers united,maybe they should head into the hills for a bit of sheep rustling,horse rustling as well.
Well they are always bleating nooooo ooooouuuuurrrrr fffaaaaaauuuuuullllltttttt,meeeeeh
wooly jumper wearing middle class numpties,pc crazy
dont know anyone who voted for them,must have been tory voters,who saw them as a safe alternative
15

Plantagenet,

08/01/2009 21:31:02
Is this the same council who wasted all our money on the trams fiasco? at least this venture might eventually show some foresight when land values rocket again in the distant future.
16

Edge Living,

on it 09/01/2009 12:28:25
# 16 Yeah but then they will sell them off cheap

 

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