Property sales in EC2Y 9 postcode sector - page 8 City of London

This is a map and list of properties recently sold in the EC2Y 9 postcode sector in the UK covering the areas of Barbican, City of London, based on the records of the Land Registry

AddressTypeDatePrice
Apartment 1102, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£1,060,000
Apartment 1111, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£615,000
Apartment 1203, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£480,000
Apartment 1403, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£475,000
Apartment 1005, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£525,000
Apartment 1001, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£980,000
Apartment 907, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£1,360,000
Apartment 910, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£455,000
Apartment 801, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£980,000
Apartment 802, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APFlat (leasehold)Aug 2013£974,999
Apartment 805, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£572,300
Apartment 806, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£555,000
Apartment 706, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£555,000
Apartment 711, The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, London, EC2Y 9APNew build flat (leasehold)Aug 2013£415,000
Flat 3, Milton Court, The Kings Gap, EC2Y 9BJFlat (leasehold)Oct 2003£750,000
Flat (leasehold)Jun 1997£102,000
Flat (leasehold)Aug 1995£82,500
5 The Kings Gap, EC2Y 9BJNew build flat (leasehold)Feb 1997£85,500

Contains HM Land Registry data © Crown copyright and database right 2024. This data is licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

Notes

The average price shown is the geometric mean which multiplies all sales prices together then takes the square root. This should reduce the impact of sales of very expensive houses.
No adjustments are made for seasonal variations, so average prices will not match the Land Registry's own figures
Sales in the final month are always lower than earlier months, due to that month's data not being complete.