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  2. Affordability of housing in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affordability_of_housing...

    Even boosting (UK) housing supply to 310,000 homes per annum in their model only brings a five per cent fall in the baseline forecast of house prices". [30] Therefore, the National Housing Federation (NHF) and Crisis from Heriot-Watt University argue that alongside the needed 340,000 new homes each year (until 2031), 145,000 of those “must be ...

  3. House price index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_price_index

    These covered the majority of mortgage lenders in the UK. The UK House Price Index replaced this release in June 2016.[3] Historically, HM Land Registry also published a separate house price index calculated by Calnea Analytics. It used the HM Land Registry’s data, which consists of the transaction records of all residential property sales in ...

  4. HM Land Registry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HM_Land_Registry

    His Majesty's Land Registry is a non-ministerial department of His Majesty's Government, created in 1862 to register the ownership of land and property in England and Wales. [ 3] It reports to the Ministry of Housing, Communities, and Local Government. [ 4] The registry contains 87% of land in the UK as of 2019.

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  6. Canadian property bubble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_property_bubble

    In March 2017, the cost of owning a single-family house in the Greater Toronto Area had grown 33% in 12 months. [23] In response to these trends, the provincial and federal governments attempted to slow the growth of the real estate market and gradually bring down prices, to aid first-time home buyers in a way that would cause the bubble to shrink slowly rather than burst.

  7. Green belt (United Kingdom) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_belt_(United_Kingdom)

    Green belt (United Kingdom) In British town planning, the green belt is a policy for controlling urban growth. The term, coined by Octavia Hill in 1875, [ 1][ 2] refers to a ring of countryside where urbanisation will be resisted for the foreseeable future, maintaining an area where local food growing, forestry and outdoor leisure can be ...

  8. Land registration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_registration

    The Land Registry has been dealing with the registration of all transactions (purchase, sale, mortgage, remortgage and other burdens) concerning registered land since 1892, and issued land certificates which are a state guarantee of the registered owner's good title up to 1 January 2007. Land Certificates have been abolished by virtue of ...

  9. Land ownership in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_ownership_in_the...

    The value of land being eroded by the sea or other natural processes declines rapidly. Land in the centre of large cities may be very valuable, for example £7.2 million per hectare was cited for central London in 2016, [1] compared with around £2500 per hectare for grouse moors in Scotland. [2]