Marie, graphic designer, lives in a tent in the picturesque, and also expensive Parisian neighborhood of Montmartre. Danish Yan, a journalist, in a garage in the fashion district, the Marais. Both have 'customized' these spaces atypical make them your home and get paid for it six times less than their upstairs neighbors.
Given the housing shortage and price growth in Paris is developing a new fashion: the suplex (a word that combines floor duplex). They are makeshift homes on the street, ie refurbished antique shops, workshops transformed into lofts, garages and flats enabled ... Unnecessary spaces before and flirty converted into modern dwellings.
Rising land in the French capital, the rise last year in Paris was 17.5% putting the price of 7,000 euros per square meter on average, according to recent data from the school of notaries, has fueled this phenomenon, which lets you rent or buy in the city without losing the portfolio in the attempt. Renting a suplex is six times cheaper than the height of a house while if you opt for the property the cost is between 15% and 20% lower.
addition, tax burdens are lower for the owners and these floors are more affordable, an advantage in a city with an old housing stock lifts orphan. The discount compensates the disadvantages, as these areas tend to be less bright and have humidity. They are also less protected and more exposed to the hand of friends gossiping.
"Sometimes it is uncomfortable because people think that this is a store and constantly call the door, but when it comes time to pay the price makes up for all these disadvantages!" Said Marie . Yan pay 300 euros for an area of \u200b\u200b30 square meters. "If I lived in the upstairs would pay at least 600," he said.
The rise of these houses is such that even an estate agency set up specifically for this type of housing: Rez-de-Chausse, 'storey'. This branch was born in 2010 and now expects profits quadrupled in 2011.
"Most customers are young, liberal professions and childless couples seeking an original and cheap housing ', they say. Thus, the agency can find real bargains as a 60-apartment 75,000 euros per square meter in the sixth district of Paris (the most expensive in the capital) or a gentleman floor 147 square meters in the central core of 350,000 euros. A treat in the crazy Parisian park
Raquel Villaecija - Via World
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