Princess Grace Ave.
Avenue
Princesse Grace is the most expensive street in the world to buy property,
where 91.740Euro($120,000) will purchase just one square metre of prime real
estate, according to a survey by Wealth Bulletin.
Prime
residential property on the top 10 most expensive streets in the world saw
their overall value fall by 12% in the last year, the survey found, with
European streets faring better than their US and emerging markets counterparts.
That
compares with price falls of between 20% to 30% in mainstream property prices
in London and New York over the same period.
Avenue
Princesse Grace might have been the most expensive street on the list, but
prices for prime property there have fallen from a staggeringly high 145.000Euro ($190,000) per sq/m a year ago.
Via
Suvretta in the Swiss ski resort of St Moritz was the only street on the list
that saw prices rise for top properties in the last year. The street ranked
sixth on the list, where property costs at least $45,000 per sq/m, an 18% rise
on the 2008 price.
The second
most expensive street was Chemin de Saint-Hospice on Cap Ferrat in the south of
France, where prime property sells for $100,000 per sq/m
Ostozhenka
in Moscow, at 26700Euro ($35,000) per sq/m, was the only street from an emerging market on
this year's list.
The addresses
that are streets ahead
• Avenue
Princesse Grace, Monaco, 91.740Euro ($120,000) per sq/m
Still the
most expensive street in the world, expect to pay at least 91.740.000Euro($120,000) per sq/m on
the iconic Avenue Princesse Grace for a modest apartment with one of the most spectacular
views in the world.
But that
looks like a bargain from a year ago, when top end residential properties on
the street were $190,000 per sq/m.
A 334 sq/m
four-bedroom penthouse on Avenue Princesse Grace is on the market at $50m -
around 113.900Euro($149,000) per sq/m - not including a 220 sq/m terrace.
Local
agents reckon asking prices are being discounted by as much as 20% and the
above property will probably sell for closer to $40m.
Monaco-based
independent agent Pieter van Naeltwijck said transactions had fallen 25% since
last year. But he said super-rich Russians were beginning to come back into the
market, fuelling renewed demand.
• Chemin de
Saint-Hospice, Cap Ferrat, South of France, $100,000 per sq/m
Less than
30 miles down the road from Avenue Princesse Grace, Chemin de Saint-Hospice is
the second most expensive street in the world, where the top properties sell
for $100,000 per sq/m
Chemin de
Saint-Hospice snakes through Cap Ferrat with its 15 houses commanding beautiful
Mediterranean views. Local estate agents say there is one property for sale on
Chemin de Saint Hospice, but it is being sold privately and its price a closely
guarded secret.
• Fifth Avenue,
New York, $72,000 per sq/m
Fifth
Avenue, New York City, has the most iconic status of all the streets on the list
and retains third place this year. But prices on the best parts of Fifth Avenue
have come off the boil in the past 12 months.
A 400 sq/m
apartment with terraces overlooking Central Park on the Upper East Side of
Fifth Avenue sold for $29m in June. Local estate agents say the market has been
affected by the lack of supply, with residents reluctant to sell because of
perceived price discounts.
•
Kensington Palace Gardens, London, $65,000 per sq/m
Kensington
Palace Gardens, the private road that abuts Kensington Palace and houses
several embassies, including the Russian delegation, is still the fourth most
expensive street in the world. Prices on KPG, as estate agents call it, have
come off no more than 15% to 20%.
Two
properties have been sold privately on KPG this year, according to estate agent
Savills, which indicates demand is still strong for London's most exclusive
address.
• Avenue
Montaigne, Paris, $54,000 per sq/m
Avenue
Montaigne in the 8th arrondisement - which includes the Élysée Palace, official
residence of President Nicolas Sarkozy, maintains its fifth place on Wealth
Bulletin's list, proving the eternal allure of Paris among the world's
wealthiest.
Estate
agents say there have been little changes in the prices paid for top properties
on the street in the last year. The strong euro also makes the dollar prices
for residential property in the city higher than they have been for some time.
Avenue
Montaigne is part of the city's Golden Triangle, which includes the Avenue
Champs-Elysees and Avenue Georges V.
• Via
Suvretta, St Moritz, Switzerland, $45,000 per sq/m
The winding
Via Suvretta in the exclusive ski resort of St Mortiz gets promoted to sixth
place in this year's survey and is the only street that saw prices rise by 18%.
Expect to pay at least $45,000 per sq/m for a top-end property on Via Suvretta.
Local
agents reckon the rising prices are due to buoyant demand from the super
wealthy looking to relocate to Switzerland, especially from countries, like the
UK, where governments are increasing tax rates for the wealthy.
Residential
prices in the top neighbourhoods of Geneva and Zurich are also experiencing a
mini price boom. The strong Swiss franc is also inflating dollar prices for
property in Switzerland.
• Via
Romazzino, Porto Cervo, Sardinia,$42,000 per sq/m
Via
Romazzino makes this year's list for the first time. Top prices on Italy's most
expensive street, in the exclusive resort of Porto Cervo, are at least $42,000
per sq/m.
Holiday
homes of many of Italy's wealthiest individuals are located on the Via
Romazzino, which is also popular with Russian billionaires. Alisher Usmanov,
the Russian oligarch and owner of Arsenal football club, likes the street so
much that he's allegedly bought eight houses located on it, or near to it.
• Severn
Road, The Peak, Hong Kong, $40,000 per sq/m
The Hong
Kong residential property market is among the most volatile in the world - just
how volatile was illustrated by the big falls in top-end property prices in the
past year.
Number two
on last year's list, with prices of $121,000 per sq/m, Severn Road has
plummeted to $40,000 per sq/m.
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