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THE LOW BLOW FACED BY BUNGALOWS
Scottish Daily Express
|August 07, 2025
Once a symbol of middle-class luxury, the prized one-storey dwelling is disappearing at an alarming rate as profit-driven developers grab plots to pile them high... but at what cost?

'LL ADMIT it: I'm a “bungalow gobbler”. Obsessed with the dream of building my own home, in 1997 I set my sights on a half-acre plot in Pulborough, West Sussex. The problem was that the rural spot already had a building on it.
In my hunt for land, it had soon emerged that the only way to secure a half-decent and affordable plot in the countryside was to gobble up a tired, postwar bungalow.
Unloved and low-slung, it was the perfect candidate for demolition - making way for my kit house imported all the way from Boston, US. The upside - as the Grand Designs effect had not yet taken hold of a nation of self-builders-in-waiting — was that the shabby bungalow cost me just £100,000 to buy, plus a few thousand more for the demolition of the existing structure.
In 2000, I achieved my dream — documented through a dozen articles in the Daily Express property section and in the second series of Channel 4’s Grand Designs — and soon, that little bungalow was a distant memory, replaced by a triple-storey house that hauled my sleepy lane into the 21st century with cedar cladding and an assertive use of double-height glazing.
Back then, and still so today, snapping up a bungalow is often just shorthand for buying land.
Take Sandbanks in Dorset - the country’s most expensive coastal enclave, where homes now average a jaw-dropping £1.28million.
Here, modest postwar bungalows are routinely razed within weeks of purchase. Few remain. Buyers see them not as homes but as “site value” — the cost of land minus demolition fees — with replacement houses selling for millions.
Yet, as I bulldozed that modest semi-derelict property to make way for something much taller, I unwittingly became part of a nationwide trend that has pushed bungalows to the brink of extinction.
Only around two million true bungalows remain in England and the number is falling every year due to redevelopment.
This story is from the August 07, 2025 edition of Scottish Daily Express.
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