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| Friday, 20 September, 2002, 11:15 GMT 12:15 UK 'Priced off our own patch' ![]() Richard and Hannah: House proud in the city
Not only did he want to stay close to relatives and friends, he had just got a job in the quarry up the road.
"The cheapest house in Stoney at the time was �89,000, which was about double the mortgage we were eligible for on our salaries," he says. Renting was also unrealistic, as the few properties to let in the pretty Peaks village had been converted into trendy loft-style apartments or cosy retreats for affluent holidaymakers.
Eventually they found a flat some miles away for just �200 a month. But the couple got what they paid for - tiny, no hot running water, no radiators. Richard and Hannah now live in Derby, an industrial city in the south of the county, in a bungalow that was almost derelict when they bought it for �46,000. Richard is working in electrical engineering and Hannah as a park ranger. Making the best of it "It's taken us 12 months to get it habitable - that was the level of property we had to buy in order to get onto the property ladder."
"This is the only way we will be able to afford to get back into the countryside - to buy a house like this in an area like this three or four times." As in other villages around the UK, Stoney Middleton has little to offer those on limited incomes. The modest dwellings once favoured by first-time buyers have shot up in value, and are now home to established families who may extend and improve rather than move up the property ladder. And of the 65 council houses that once provided affordable housing, today just six still belong to the local authority. 'Starter homes' Nor is this a new problem. In 1980, newly-weds Carolyn and Allen Hodgkinson had to move to Chesterfield where a terrace house cost �15,000 compared with at least twice that in Stoney Middleton.
The couple, now in their forties, live there still, with their two youngest sons. The eldest, Simon, is in his final year of university. Carolyn fears he too will have to settle many miles from home, for the 1987 development was the first and last set of affordable homes built in the village. "I don't know if and when he will want to return, but it would be a great shame if he did not have a choice. All my sons are very active in village life, they are just the kind of people who make it a great place to live," said Carolyn, now an administrator with an IT consultancy.
"Decades ago there was something like 12 pubs in Stoney. That had dropped to two when I was a boy, and now it's down to one. "Once everyone went to the pub every night because that was where everything happened, even community meetings. Today only Christmas and the mid-summer well-dressing festivals feel like old times because that's when everyone comes home. It's when my generation returns to the countryside." |
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