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UK’s ‘narrowest home’ on sale for £225k slammed as ‘absolute sheer greed’

A home no wider than a London bus and regarded as one of many UK’s narrowest, is up on the market for whopping £225,000.

The one-bed terrace is in Edgware, North West London, the place properties on the identical avenue often go for between £460,000 and £550,000, the Daily Express reviews. At first look, this home looks like a steal, particularly because it’s in Zone 4 of London.

But there is a catch, because it appears to be like prefer it’s hooked up to a different home and even shares a driveway that may’t be used as a result of the itemizing says it is “on street parking” solely.

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The bedroom is more spacious than the outside would have you believe
The bed room is extra spacious than the surface would have you ever imagine, that includes the floating head of @tiktokestateagent

Some reckon the house owners of the next-door home received permission to show their storage into this two-storey dwelling to make a bit of additional dosh. It’s at present listed on Rightmove with Oyster Properties, who say one among its greatest options is its “own entrance”.

According to the floorplan, the downstairs is 2.21m extensive, which is definitely narrower than a London bus, which measures 2.55m. It’s being offered as “ideal for first-time buyers or investment with potential rental income of approx £1,200 per month”.

The inside photographs present small kitchen, however a barely extra spacious bed room, in addition to a decent-sized lounge . . . however a little bit of a grim rest room.



Would you spend £225k on this?
Would you spend £225k on this?

A housing skilled TikTook consumer @tiktokestateagent had amusing in regards to the itemizing, calling the home an “eyesore”. He commented: “To me, this is absolute sheer greed on another level. I know there’s a housing crisis but lets not start knocking down our garages and building terraced properties as a way to answer that.”

Then he additional added: “I don’t know how they can get away with classing that as a terraced property. To me, that’s a one-bedroom maisonette flat.” Once the video received well-liked, others shortly chimed in, sharing his views. One particular person posted: “Notorious across this area of London for exploiting planning laws.”

* This article was crafted with the assistance of an AI instrument, which quickens Daily Star’s editorial analysis. An editor reviewed this content material earlier than it was revealed. You can report any errors to starletters@dailystar.co.uk