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Bradford Council's umbrella-in-ceiling house sells for £83k
Bradford Council's umbrella-in-ceiling house sells for £83k

BBC News

time27-03-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Bradford Council's umbrella-in-ceiling house sells for £83k

An empty house with an umbrella hanging from the ceiling of one of its rooms was among a number of properties to have been successfully sold at auction by a cash-strapped part of its sell-off programme to make extra funds to balance its books, six Bradford Council-owned assets went under the hammer earlier this of them - including the empty house and an office building - sold for a total of more than £600,000, however two of the lots - a 14-acre plot of land and a parade of commercial premises - failed to authority has said it planned to sell off at least 150 assets in the next few years in an effort to raise about £100m. The empty house with the umbrella hanging from its ceiling, located near Peel Park, had a guide price of £45,000, but ended up selling for £83,000 at the Pugh Property Auction on the Salts Wharf office building, on Ashley Lane in Shipley, which had a guide price of £150,000, eventually sold for more than double that at £358, successfully sold was a semi-detached property on Stephen Crescent, which had a guide price of £130,000 but sold for £140, land on Hainworth Road in Keighley, described as being "predominantly grassland and tree cover" and which had a guide price of £15,000, eventually sold for £30, of the successful buyers were not disclosed by Bradford Council. According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, one of the lots that failed to sell was land on Exmouth Place, off Bolton Road, which was allocated as a future housing site where up to 75 homes could be as "a greenfield site in a sustainable location within the urban area", it had a guide price of £225,000 but did not attract a other lot which did not sell was a series of properties on North Street and Bow Street in Keighley currently occupied by commercial parade of properties was said to generate an annual rent of £53,000 and had been given a guide price of £485,000, but went part of a request to the government last year for "exceptional financial support", Bradford Council was given permission to use money from the sale of assets to fund council can normally only use money from such sales for capital projects, such as new developments. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

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