Coventry Street has also seen a significant reshuffle, being pushed down 11 spots to now be a light blue tile. Oxford Street, which was previously one of the most expensive tiles on the classic board, has been moved down 13 places, with an average sale price of £1,019,975. Whitechapel Road, The Angel Islington and Old Kent Road remain as the three cheapest on the board. Adjusted for inflation, 1935 prices would see Mayfair worth only £93,911, Strand worth only £74,799 and Whitehall worth only £60,410. One of the most significant differences in Whitehall, which has now seen itself be moved 13 spots up the board to a green tile, with an average sale price of £4,393,652. Strand, which was once halfway down the board as a red tile, is now the second most expensive area, with an average sale price of £5,438,715. It found that Mayfair still sits as the most expensive area with an average sale price of £6,830,154. It also looks at property size to see each area’s average ‘price per metre’. The research by gaming experts SolitaireBliss analysed the average sale price of each area since 2015 to see what the order of the board would look like nowadays. While the original 1935 order of the Monopoly board was loosely based on property values at the time, new research has revealed what the board could look like with modern property values. What would the Monopoly Board look like with modern house prices?
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