- FUN AT THE CHATWOOD ESTATE SHAMELESS GAY NIFTY FULL
- FUN AT THE CHATWOOD ESTATE SHAMELESS GAY NIFTY TV
FUN AT THE CHATWOOD ESTATE SHAMELESS GAY NIFTY FULL
We live on a street full of families and we love it.” "There is a bit of a stigma about Wythenshawe, still, about it being rough. “The houses, a lot of them former council houses, are a lot bigger than new homes being built elsewhere. It’s a very green place - most people have a front and back garden, not like a lot of new-builds. “Our house is really close to the motorway and the Metrolink is just around the corner. There’s a real community spirit and people really do help each other out. Miss Cassidy who has a year-old daughter Violet with Mr Gibson, said: “It’s a lovely place to live and hopefully we will make a bit of money on the house. Teacher Caroline Cassidy, 25 who bought a home in Wythenshawe with partner Oliver Gibson, 26, a web developer, said the value of their home had risen by 10% since the purchase in October 2013. The preconceived notions are disappearing. General manager Jeff Jackson said: “People can see the change happening before their eyes. Wythenshawe shopping centre, still undergoing regeneration, has just nine empty units - the best rate in the country. There are more than 1,500 new businesses and more than 52,000 jobs. In the last decade, 3,000 new homes have been built in Wythenshawe. House sales in Wythenshawe doubled between 20 and research found living near a Metrolink station can add an average of £8,300 on to the value of a home.īuyers in Manchester will pay an average of 4.6pc more for a home within 500 metres of a tram stop, compared to an otherwise identical house 1,500metres away. Prices have tripled in the last 15 years - and 55% of homes are now privately-owned. Yet in February this year, it was around £152,000. Rightmove data shows the average sale price for an “M22” home in Wythenshawe - where the population is 86,000 - was £122,000 in 2010. It is thought house buyers finding other Manchester suburbs too expensive re looking further south of the city following new investment - including the building of the Metrolink tram line through Wythenshawe, which links Manchester Airport to the city centre. In 2007, a teenage hoodlum from the Benchill Mad Dogs gang fired an imaginary gun with his fingers at David Cameron as the-then Opposition leader toured the estate - formerly one of the largest council housing estates in Europe.īut now according to figures from housing website Rightmove, at the beginning of the year, the average M22 asking price was around £128,700 and that rocketed to £205,600 just four months later after many former tenants bought their council houses.
FUN AT THE CHATWOOD ESTATE SHAMELESS GAY NIFTY TV
Traditionally, the former garden city is notorious for its high crime rate, social deprivation, the home of TV drama Shameless - and the area where the Duchess of York filmed a documentary about its gritty reputation.
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New figures have shown asking prices for homes in Wythenshawe, south Manchester, have shot up by almost 60% in just four months - putting it just behind affluent areas of Chelsea. A city district once branded Britain’s grimmest council estate has stunned property experts by becoming the UK’s second best housing hotspot, it emerged today.