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King Sturge reports booming student accommodation sector



Demand in the £20bn UK student accommodation sector continues to outstrip supply, according to a new report by King Sturge.



The firm adds that the sector is no longer a niche property market but is now a recognised as an asset class in its own right by financial institutions and investors,.




The UK’s 450,000 purpose-built beds now have a total value of more than £20bn, says the firm.




King Sturge says there were more than £700m of transactions in the sector last year, the largest being the disposal of the Moorfield student portfolio, a £190m sale of around 4,000 bed spaces in several cities.




With the numbers of students continuing to rise – there were more than 1.43m in full-time higher education in 2007, an increase of almost 6% on the previous year – demand continues to outstrip supply.




“This year we have recorded a strong increase in the number of privately developed, purpose-built beds, up by 36% since 2005 to more than 123, 500,” says Philip Hillman, the national head of King Sturge’s UK student accommodation group.




“It is clear that the sector is entering a new phase of university-led development and refurbishment of existing stock, alongside an increased focus on the provision of premium accommodation for overseas students in major European university centres.”




But he warned that while significant opportunities still exist in London, with its supply-demand imbalance, this could be tempered by an increasingly restrictive planning regime.




The three market leaders in the sector remain Unite Group, UPP and Opal Property Group.




Between them they account for more than half of the UK’s existing student beds, and the 38,000-plus which are currently in the pipeline.




Outside London, Manchester has the UK’s highest student population, at around 70,000, followed by Glasgow, Birmingham, Leeds and Edinburgh.




Hillman added: “After a period of extraordinary growth in the development by the private sector of direct-let student accommodation, the prime focus now for the private sector is for direct-let schemes in the capital.




“There will, however, continue to be large-scale developments in provincial university cities, where there is still an imbalance in the supply of good quality purpose-built accommodation.”




neil.jones@btconnect.com


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