LDG West End Properties: Best in the West

Since our humble beginnings back in 1987 we've watched the West End property market steadily increase in activity. And over our 20 years in operation we've observed the West End neighbourhoods of Soho, Covent Garden, Fitzrovia, Bloomsbury and Marylebone grow, each developing individual idiosyncrasies and attracting their own niche market.

During this time we've built up an extensive base of clients who keep coming back because there are no other local west end agents with the depth, knowledge and track record that we have. This is the essence of our personalised and professional approach which greatly distinguishes us from our competitors, making us stand out in the crowd as the showcase estate agent. So to commemorate and celebrate LDG's flourishing evolution we're taking a trip down memory lane…

West End property sales

West End lettings agents

PAST: LDG have operated as a unique bespoke estate agent tailor-made for selling and letting residential properties in the central nerve of London's West End, for over 20 years.

PRESENT: As the warm months approach so the need for West End tenants increases. We are aware that the run up to summer is an important time for West End landlords, with the influx of visitors, including students and those employees being transferred from other countries, in special need of a central London place of residency.

Fitzrovia and Bloomsbury are incredibly popular areas for short and long term property lettings, and the huge market demand needs to be taken advantage of. To accommodate this growing need LDG estate agents is presently expanded its Central London property lettings department
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FUTURE: Our clientele are long-standing and they keep coming back to LDG estate agents largely by virtue of our proven West End property track record and continued personal recommendation by satisfied property patrons. We have a deeper client base than most other West End estate and lettings agents, and we aim to continue to build strong business relationships in the future through our select personal service and with communication and personality being foremost in our minds.

In The Market - Record Sales Continue

The New Year and spring has seen continual growth in the property market, with locations such as Lizmans House, Bedford Street, Goodge Street, Chenies Mews and Lamb's Conduit Street all achieving record prices.

With our 20 years experience we believe that, should interest rates increase, the actual value of West End properties will not be significantly affected or decline. We have encountered several negotiations where contracts have gone to sealed bids - a custom which was once a rarity but is now common practice.

As always LDG's West End properties are consistently interesting and varied, despite the current shortage.

Deposits protected with LDG!

Conforming to new government legislation LDG are participating in the deposit protection scheme (DPS).

The scheme safeguards the tenant's deposit in cases where there are disputes relating to damage, costs or charges incurred during the tenancy.

Call LDG lettings advisors Tony or Javier on 020 7580 1010 for further information.

LDG The Property Finders

Consider LDg's professional West End property advice.
Too busy to constantly search for a flat? Avoid missing out on that ideal property or feeling frustrated that the best places go before they go online!

Retaining LDG to act on your behalf:

  • Take the stress and the time-consuming factors out of your property search.

  • We source and vet properties for you throughout the West End.

  • With vast experience we are able to find properties 'off' market.

Take advantage of this additional service. Call partners Laurence Glynne or Clare Moll: 020 7580 1010.

Spooks comes to Fitzrovia

Popular British television spy series Spooks recently shot on location in Fitzrovia at Candy & Candy's Middlesex Hospital development on Mortimer Street and at the LDG offices at 39 Foley Street.

West End: Past, Present and Future

With 20 years experience and a wealth of West End knowledge, we've witnessed many changes over the past two decades, in both the local property market and our own personal growth as central London's bespoke estate agent. Mobile phones were the size of bricks when it all began back in January 1987 and Clare Moll left her life as an opera singer to join forces with Laurence Glynn and found LDG.

Originally established at 57 Queen Anne Street, LDG resided there until 1989 before moving to the nearby 70 Marylebone Lane location until 1995. 50 South Molten Street was home until 2001, and then in 2002 we relocated to our current corner at 39 Foley Street, Fitzrovia.

Over the years LDG's opinion has been sought by various prestigious publications including The Telegraph and Home and Property, with several featured articles personally penned by partner Laurence Glynn. We are also regularly requested for our opinion by LBC and various London radio stations, and have featured in television interviews and all aspects of the media. We have an extensive client base which includes celebrities, royals, property developers and investors, and much of our business is by personal recommendation.

What's On This Spring in Soho and Covent Garden?

PINK PARADE

London's massive annual Gay Pride Parade will start at 13.00 on Saturday 30th June in Oxford Street by Selfridges. The flamboyant and colourful carnival will continue down Regent Street toward Trafalgar Square, before culminating at Victoria Embankment.

SUMMER AT THE ACADEMY

The Royal Academy's annual Summer Exhibition takes place from 11th June to 19th August 2007. The world's largest open submission contemporary art exhibition showcases work by unknown and emerging artists alongside that of more established names. The Summer Exhibition attracts about 9,000 paintings, sculptures, photographs, drawings, prints and architectural models.

REVELRY ON REGENT STREET

Regent Street's events have a truly international flavour in 2007 with a Spanish month planned for June with in-store promotions, wine tasting, dance displays and live music. The party spirit will continue through to July with al fresco dining on Heddon Street (Regent Street's food quarter) and live DJ nights twice weekly planned to entertain you on balmy summer evenings.

Soho Shorts

The Rushes Soho Shorts Festival 2007 will run from 28th July to 3rd August at venues in and around the West End. The not-for-profit film festival is well known for its championing of emerging young talent.

This year it sees the addition of a Documentary category, complementing the five original categories: Short Film, Newcomer, Title Sequences & Idents, Music Video and Animation.

Soho and Covent Garden Focus

In the 17th century they were worlds apart: one a hunting ground for London's aristocracy; the other a farmers market. Times haven't changed a lot in almost 400 years. Even now you're bound to pass the odd queen in Soho; while Covent Garden's Italian-style piazza has long been a hive of activity.

These two eclectic districts of the capital still draw a diverse populous to their pulsating pavements. Soho's narrow mosaic of streets and hidden alleyways are the epitome of London cool, where artists, tailors, media workers and musicians collide, allured by the area's creative, edgy nature.

And while soulful Soho is synonymous with style, Covent Garden's leafy quarter is a cosmopolitan village of culture and colour. Crowds of tourists, theatre-goers, caffeine junkies and market traders pack themselves into 'Theatreland' each day, where the area prides itself on being the nurturer of the newly renovated Royal Opera House and a string of prestigious theatres.

These vibrant neighbourhoods, however, have never lost their hardy residential community. Property is at a premium and everything is within an easy stroll of the sights. Those that can afford to live in Soho and Covent Garden have the West End and all that it offers right on their doorstep, including über-trendy clothing stores, funky jazz clubs, cutting-edge production houses and a throng of bars, pubs, open-air cafés, restaurants, cinemas, theatres and art galleries.

Well-served by public transport, Soho has set the trend for London loft living. A large cross-section of potential tenants, from celebrities to city high-flyers, are moving into prominent locations (such as Wardour Street's Soho Lofts and above the Soho Theatre) as well as the quieter back streets.

Hidden away in Covent Garden are fabulous innovative penthouses with roof terraces and converted period buildings in quaint streets. Easy to navigate and with a consistently strong rental market, the area is within close proximity to The City offering convenient access to London's financial district.

Did You Know?

  • In Tudor times Soho was a hunting ground of open fields and duck ponds, hence the name 'Soho' which derives from an old hunting call

  • Covent Garden was established on the site of the Abbot of Westminster's convent garden, from which the area's name originates

  • Only when the City of London in the east became too crowded, after the Great Fire of 1666, did Soho become residential

  • The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, was established in 1660 and is the oldest theatre in Covent Garden

  • Frith Street in Soho is where John Logie Baird first demonstrated television

  • Alfred Hitchcock's 1972 film, Frenzy, takes place amongst the pubs and fruit markets of Covent Garden

  • The piano was played for the first time in public at the Royal Opera House in 1767

Soho Gold

Goldbeaters House, the former home of the founders of Foyles of Soho and entertainer Danny La Rue, is currently available to rent. This recently refurbished two bedroom and two bathroom apartment boasts a private decked terrace and conservatory.

LDG's Platinum Competition Winners

The correct answers were as follows:

  • Richmond Mews which is in Soho

  • Paramount Court which is in Bloomsbury Bloomsbury

  • Harlequin Court in Covent Garden

  • West One House which is in Fitzrovia

Three lucky Local winners received Charles Heidsieck champagne gift packs for their correct answers. The winners were: Dr Yvonne Craig, Mr Greg Appleby and Maurice ?

Fitzrovia:

Colville Place, W1T

Lined with charming houses all graced by ornamental stone pots and urns filled with greenery, this secluded Georgian court of about 1765 links Charlotte and Whitfield Streets and was laid out by a carpenter named John Colville. Today its grassy picnic area is packed in the summer months by West End workers soaking up the sun, or shoppers seeking a place of quiet repose from nearby Tottenham Court Road. Rarely do properties come on the market in this picturesque passageway. The last to do so sold for £1.2 million, and today it would easily exceed this value.

Middleton Place, W1W

This quaint and quiet pedestrianised thoroughfare is neatly tucked away between Great Titchfield and Great Portland Streets in the heart of enchanting Fitzrovia: an area which is being hailed as 'the new Notting Hill'. Lying just off Langham and Riding House Streets, Middleton Place is characterised by attractive, Georgian townhouses overlooked at its Langham Street entrance by the charming Victorian tavern The Yorkshire Grey. A three bedroom house has been on the market recently for £1.4 mill.

Soho:

Meard Street, W1F

Boasting beautiful Queen Anne houses, shops and York flag stones, Meard Street is one of Soho's most sought after real estates. Connecting Wardour Street to Dean Street this paved semi-pedestrianised thoroughfare is perhaps the best place in Soho to admire Georgian architecture. There is ongoing debate over the origins of the street's name, with some suggesting the passageway was once a sewer, while others claiming it was named after John Meard, a carpenter responsible for building and developing the area. LDG has, over the past 20 years, sold more properties here than any other local agent and is continually achieving record sale prices.

Silver Place, W1F

This lesser-known little cutting will take you from Soho's Lexington Street to Ingestre Place and is characterised by boutique shops and residential apartments. It's a rather anonymous alleyway which seems to evade the attentions of the usual reference books. To the south-east corner stands Pargiter Court: a residential block now used as retirement flats. There is no documented reason why it's called Silver Place, but the street it leads off, Beak Street, was once named Silver Street, which incidentally runs parallel to Golden Square. A one bedroom flat 3 years ago on market for £375,000.

Covent Garden:

Broad Court, WC2B

Peering between Drury Lane and Bow Street the suitably named Broad Court replaced in 1745 what was once the cramped and narrow Red Lion Court. This historic pedestrian precinct is now a refined avenue of stone flag paving, 19th century gas lamps and an assortment of potted bushes. Here you will find the soon-to-be refurbished Fielding Hotel, and in a narrow tributary off the Court is the Sun Tavern, a pleasant little haunt with tables set out just before the passage emerges through an archway into Long Acre. The predominantly Victorian mansion flats found here are priced at around £515

New Row, WC2N

Right in the heart of London, where theatres, galleries, museums and restaurants are all on the door step, is New Row: a convenient little cut-through which will take you from St Martin's Lane to King Street and on to Covent Garden's popular Piazza. This secluded semi-pedestrianised street is lined with a combination of Georgian and Victorian houses, and has a villagey feel with a number of listed buildings, cafés and boutique shops lining its quaint through fare.

Bloomsbury:

Duke's Road / Woburn Walk, WC1H

Bordering King's Cross and Bloomsbury, Duke's Road and Woburn Walk are hidden treasures in this highly sought-after West End location. Woburn Walk, which leads from Upper Woburn Place to Duke's Road, is a Dickensian walkway in the northern end of Bloomsbury which features beautifully preserved bow-fronted buildings that were built by the architect Thomas Cubitt in 1822. The small street is home to many restaurants, bookshops and galleries and offers a pleasant retreat from the noise and traffic of nearby Euston Road.

Lamb's Conduit Street, WC1N

Lamb's Conduit Street was named after a William Lamb, a gentleman of the Chapel Royal under Henry VIII who, at his own expense, drew several springs into a conduit in the street. Leading from the entrance to the Foundling Hospital into Red Lion Street, High Holborn, it is known today for its independent retailers and community spirit which give the street such character. Another LDG specialist street, Lamb's Conduit recently achieved a record price with a maisonette reaching in excess of £1.75 million.


 

 

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West End Estate Agents: West End Property Sales and Rentals
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As members of the National Association of Estate Agents, Association of Residential Letting Agents and the Estate Agents Ombudsman Scheme, you can be assured of the highest standards of professionalism at all times

West End Estate Agents and Lettings Agents with property for sale and to rent in the West End.

LDG offer specialist property services to those buying flats or houses or with properties to let in
Fitzrovia, Soho, Covent Garden, Bloomsbury and Marylebone


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Tel: +44 (0)20 7580 1010 / Fax: +44 (0)20 7290 0595 / Email: enquiries@ldg.co.uk

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