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In October 2007, The Channel 4 programme Location, Location, Location: Best and Worst Live, Edinburgh was named the best place to live in Britain.
Presented by Phil Spencer and Kirstie Allsopp, the programme saw the Scottish capital jump from third place in 2006.
See below for further information, as detailed on the Channel 4 website.
Edinburgh: The Best Place to Live in the UK 2007
 
Storming into the top spot in the 4Homes chart, Scotland's capital and second largest city (population 457,800) is probably best known for the annual Edinburgh Festival, when an estimated half a million tourists flock to the city to see world-class theatre, comedy, films and music. But what's it like to live there full-time?

Phil & Kirstie's View
This year’s very best place to live winner is Edinburgh, Scotland’s capital city. It’s the flower of Scotland – and the rest of the UK now! So swing your chariots in this direction! Edinburgh tops our countdown and ranks highly in ALL our 6 categories. What makes it even more a winner is that the typical house goes for just £205,000! That’s £5,000 below the UK average.

It also has amazing lifestyle on offer, with far and away the highest number of shops, bars and restaurants in our top ten, and for culture vultures there are more museums and galleries here than any other Local Authority.

 

And the biggest plus for living here? Well you’d be a resident of one of the most beautiful cities in Europe. Edinburgh’s got the highest concentration of listed buildings in the UK. How appropriate then, that it should be top of our list of the Best & Worst Places to Live in the UK 2007!
 
Overview


So, how did they do it? All the UK’s 434 local authorities were judged on exactly the same criteria - crime, education, employment, environment, lifestyle and health, using the most up to date official statistics. Once the research team had collated the data, a consultant statistician was called in to analyse it.

A representative sample of a thousand people across the UK, aged 18 upwards, were asked which of the six criteria would be most important to them if they were to consider moving home, and to then rank the rest in order. Overall they prioritised them in order as: Crime; Environment; Lifestyle; Health; Education; Employment.

The results of this survey were used to weight the criteria in order of importance to the homebuyer.
Edinburgh's beloved Old Town, with its medieval road plan and Reformation era buildings, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. But a £20 million regeneration programme announced in June 2007 will see a series of rundown buildings between the Royal Mile and Market Street transformed into a brand new quarter, set to include 80 flats and a budget hotel. Locals aren't pleased, but if you're planning to move, you could snap up some brand new housing in the picturesque heart of the city.

Also a World Heritage Site, the New Town, built from 1765 onwards, and originally designed to be purely residential, followed a grid-like street layout like modern day New York when first built, much of which you'll still find intact today. These days, the New Town is known for its shops - the famous Princes Street being retail Mecca for visitors and locals alike.

The South side, Edinburgh's less famous and primarily residential district, can nevertheless boast famous residents: if you like the sound of having authors J. K. Rowling, Ian Rankin, and Alexander McCall Smith for neighbours, this is the place to be. To the east, the port of Leith was controversially merged with Edinburgh in 1920 and has enjoyed a growing profile since the 1980s as an excellent environment for white-collar workers.

A prosperous city, just over half of Edinburgh's residents work in professional occupations or as senior management, with just 1.9 per cent of the town's population claiming job seekers allowance. This is reflected in higher property prices than the national average. In fact, prices there have climbed steadily for the last five years, with the average Edinburgh home now over the £200,000 price barrier.

Think that’s too expensive? It’s still half the cost of a home in London, so if it’s capital city living for you, this is certainly one you can afford to buy in. And for that alone, Edinburgh deserves its place as the pick of the crop!

 
 
 
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