More For Your Money: Sydenham SE26
By Robert Liebman, 11th May 2005 Republished with
kind permission of The Independent
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After eight years in a flat in Forest Hill, Ian Jessup
is buying a house near Sydenham train station. This time round, he chose his
location after extensive legwork and methodical calculation. |
"My father was a steeplejack so we moved around the
country and lived in a caravan. But when he worked on the Post Office Tower in
London, we lived in Forest Hill. I was a child then but I remembered the area,
and when I returned to London that is where I went," he explains.
As the managing director of Interact, a firm that
provides theatre skills to the corporate world, Jessup did consider moving
closer to his office in Kennington. "I looked at properties in a corridor from
Sydenham to Kennington. For the same square footage that I could get in
Sydenham, if I went two miles toward Kennington, the price would rise by as
much as £100,000. Sydenham also has wider streets and bigger-proportioned
houses," he says.
Square footage per pound was not his only
consideration. "In Sydenham, you can still feel the way that London grew, as a
series of villages. You get a sense of a complete community, and you also get
access to London generally. The shops here are improving all the time.
Sydenham's demographic has changed in the last five to 10 years. Many people
living there now are self-employed or work in the arts, and this is reflected
in the bistros and other shops that are opening."
Jessup is buying a four-bedroom Victorian house that
does not need any work, "but is getting it anyway. I want to change the
configuration of the house and am already discussing it with builders. The work
will take about four months, and we will remain in our flat while the work is
being done.
"The house is large, about 1,900sq ft, with many
original features and a south-facing garden. The average bedroom is around 15ft
x 12ft, with high ceilings. One thing that attracted me enormously is that it
is a house without any small rooms."
What kind of properties are available?
New luxury flats at one extreme, 1820s cottages at the
other. Sydenham also has some small houses that were once occupied by the
workers who erected Crystal Palace in the early 1850s, mini-mansions and an
array of Victorian and Edwardian houses. Gypsy Hill offers panoramic views, and
Halifax Street is a conservation area.
What are the prices like?
Purpose-built, conversion and above-the-shop studios
and one-bedroom flats cost between £100,000 and £150,000.
Two-bedroom flats start at about £150,000, which also buys a three-
bedroom split-level ex-council maisonette in a low-rise block (the agent is
Galloways). A three-bedroom conversion flat, on the other hand, in a
castle-like pile built in 1896 for the German ambassador, is under offer for
£360,000. The largest houses with gardens attract seven-figure prices.
Just north of Crystal Palace, and that little bit
closer to central London, Sydenham is subdivided into Lower, Upper and
plain-vanilla Sydenham. Cheaper than Dulwich on its northern border, Upper
Sydenham has an enviable array of large character homes, the best offering
panoramic views and massive gardens. Properties cost less in Lower Sydenham,
which is closer to Catford and generally less convenient and prestigious. This
is the bargain location for smaller period homes.
Is transport as dismal as rumoured?
Not according to Ian Jessup, who clocks 15 minutes
into central London. On suburban national rail lines, trains from Sydenham Hill
and Penge East stations go to Victoria Station, and those from Sydenham station
in Lower Sydenham go to London Bridge. But big changes are being planned for
this Tube-deprived area.
Sydenham
Station looking towards Forest Hill on a busy Sunday lunchtime.
Tell me more
"The proposed Crystal Palace extension - from the tram
terminus at Beckenham Junction to Crystal Palace - would provide interchanges
at the train station with the East London line, and additionally at the bus
station," says a spokesperson for the London Development Agency.
How's the shopping?
"Not brilliant," admits Julia Russell of the agents
Wooster & Stock, citing only "Somerfields on Sydenham Road and a
Sainsbury's Savacentre in Bell Green. A lot of our buyers ask whether we are in
an area where Ocado delivers for Waitrose. We are."
What about amenities?
Great for walkers, golfers and the outdoorsy set.
Dulwich Park has woods, a nature reserve, a golf course, tennis courts and
playing fields. The smaller Mayow Park in Lower Sydenham and Sydenham Wells
Park in Upper Sydenham each have a bowling green and tennis courts. Dulwich
College is just west of Sydenham Hill station.
What about Crystal Palace Park?
The 200-acre park has lakes, playing fields, a concert
bowl, a maze, the National Sports Centre, a television mast, and more than two
dozen dinosaurs. The London Development Agency is taking responsibility of the
park's sports centre early next year, and has an option for the entire park by
2009.
Might they banish the dinosaurs?
Unlikely. The oversized 150-year-old brick, iron and
stucco sculptures are Grade I-listed and were recently restored. Victorian
palaeontology had little concern for Mesozoic accuracy, but these imaginative
creatures appeal to visitors of all ages.
And one for the pub quiz?
Which famous cricketer lived in SE26? (Extra credit if
you can name the road on which he lived.)
Answer: W G Grace (1848-1915) lived on Lawrie Park
Road. (Yet more credit: What names do the initials W G stand for? Answer:
William Gilbert.
©2005 The Independent News & Media (UK)
Ltd
Click <here> for more information on Sydenham
Property
Dinosaurs in Crystal Palace Park More <here>
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Site of WG Grace's
House Lawrie Park Road
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