Don't know the building but I would never buy in Hulme. Its a bad area, mixed in with a lot of social housing.
Also a lot of supply there I think. If your after a rental for students/ young proffesionals then I would stick to Wilmslow Road. Probably pay a bit more but less supply and a much nicer area.
Out of interest how much are the apartments selling for there?
Hi
Thanks for the comment, A one bed apartment is £95,000 which incudes parking, the development is beside the new Hulme Asda,
I was ovwe there and it is about 10 mins from city cente
Thanks again
For £100k for a 1bed you are better off looking at somewhere like Withington or Fallowfield. Nice Southern suburbs where you will always rent.
To be honest Hulme is not a good place ot invest.
Not sure if that is entirely fair. Hulme is not a place to live imo but it is a good place ot invest. Its got a good rental market and attracts new movers to the city (due to its proximity to the city centre) and students due to its proximity to Oxford Road and the unis. turnover of tenant is relatively high as people tend ot move out when they get to know the city or get mugged.
So you basically saying its a s******!
I don't disagree with you about naive people moving into the city and living there and then moving on the following year due to the crime.
If you had £100k to invest in Manchester and there was a same type of property and price in say fallowfield as there was in Hulme would you seriously take the Hulme option?! I wouldn't touch the place as an investment.
Serious issues of oversupply there too. It is somewhat harder to build as many flats in the likes of fallowfield/ withington and the local ammenities for students is so much greater too.
Following the posts here, I happened to be in Manchester at the weekend and had a look at the area in question.
Frankly, its a Crap location, and you could do better almost anywhere else in Manchester. As someone else pointed out, its too close to some notorious blackspots. There is a theory that almost all sink estates will get better in time, but that assumes that the lowlife will move on somewhere else. The reality is that "somewhere else" is down this side of the city.
For 100k you could still buy a small redbrick in Denton, nice upcoming area on the outskirts of the city that rents well and has few social problems. Go up the high street there and drop into any of the agents (about four or five at last count) and buy something right for your money.
For heavens sake stay away from the sales-driven high-commission projects like the one in question and buy in the real market! How often do I have to tell you guys!
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