![]() ![]() Whilst there has been no change in the cheapest two areas, or the five most expensive, based on today's average house prices every other colour category would see at least one change on a modern Monopoly board. In 1936 the average value of a London house on a Monopoly board stood at £208 but now with the property market in the capital remaining seemingly resistant to the shifts in house prices experienced in the rest of the UK, the average house price in these famous London streets now stands at £788,106. There has been plenty of movement in other streets. Of all the streets on the famous board they are still the most expensive and the cheapest but in reality a property in Mayfair would cost £1,426,689 and in Old Kent Road £192,714, according to research from the Halifax. When the game came onto the market almost 80 years ago Mayfair was the most expensive street and Old Kent Road the cheapest at just £60. Mayfair became an iconic London address when the Monopoly board game made it the most expensive street to buy houses at £400 but research shows just how much prices have risen since then. ![]()
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