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Upwardly mobile in Kings Heath

Kings Heath continues to be an enigmatic suburb of contrasts

Kings Heath is one of Birmingham's most attractive suburbs. Shahid Naqvi explains why you would want to live there

To many, not least its inhabitants, Kings Heath is something of an enigma. Situated four miles south of the city centre, it’s Birmingham’s third biggest shopping area (after the city centre and Sutton Coldfield).

According to a recent analysis by Birmingham City Council, the largest proportion of the population is aged between 25 and 44 (35.9 per cent), unemployment is below the city average and the percentage of people educated to degree level is well above the city average.

It contains two of the best grammar schools in the country and an abundance of attractive green space, yet its high street is littered with charity and pound shops.

In the height of summer, it plays host to the epitome of middle England that is the BBC Gardener's World show, and yet there’s not a single bar that its booming young professional populace would be seen dead in.

Some regard Kings Heath as the poorer relation of the more fashionably bohemian "village" of Moseley less than half-a-mile down the road.

Moseley has always enjoyed a status as one of Birmingham's most interesting areas, attracting an eclectic mix of creative sorts – academics, politicians and journalists – to its many drinking haunts.

However, a predominance of large Victorian houses which either remain at the top end of the market or are turned into less salubrious bedsits, coupled with a recent explosion of trendy bars, restaurants and cafes has boosted house prices way beyond the reach of many.