Ringo’s childhood home is now worth less than £600.
Accounts show that the terraced house on Madryn Street - worth £60,000 in April 2013 - now has a value of just £525.
The property is one of hundreds in the Welsh Streets area of the Dingle that were all together worth around £17m when bought by the council but are now worth around £1m.
All
the houses are currently in possession of the council and Plus Dane
housing association and are due either to be demolished or refurbished
as part of a major regeneration project.
But critics have
consistently argued that more of the houses should be saved than knocked
down, despite council claims they are of little historical or cultural
merit.
The former Beatle’s house was for several years owned by
Merseytravel, and is regularly visited by coach parties of Fab Four
fans.
But there is a stark contrast between the value of his childhood home and that of the houses the other three Beatles lived in.
John’s childhood home in Newcastle Road in Wavertree sold for just under half a million pounds in October last year, despite a guide price of around £150,000.
George’s childhood home in Upton Green in Speke is set to be auctioned at the Cavern for upwards of £100,000, and both Paul’s family home in Forthlin Road in Speke and Lennon’s Menlove Avenue semi are National Trust properties.
Jonathan
Brown, from SAVE Britain’s Heritage, said: “To paraphrase John Lennon
talking about Ringo, this isn’t the best house in the world. It’s not
even the best house in Liverpool, but it does draw thousands of tourists
from all around the world, and you’ve got to wonder how little they
must think Liverpool values The Beatles to let these houses be run down in this way.”
Council
cabinet member for housing Cllr Ann O'Byrne said: "This is one of the
properties that will be saved, therefore the value of that house will
increase once we can continue with the scheme.
"If SAVE had not
objected (and caused a public inquiry into the scheme), we would have
been on with this by now. It's because they interfered that this house
has devalued the way it has."
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