Halifax asked UK homeowners which homes of the small screen provided the greatest inspiration for their ideal abode. The open plan living spaces of homes on Ramsay Street proved to be the most popular option for most families (40 per cent).
Despite its unfortunate happenings, the quaint idyllic cottages of Midsomer would be the property of choice for 35 per cent of people, although the terraces of Coronation Street (eight per cent), New York loft apartments in Friends (eight per cent) and the palatial Southfork Dallas mansion (eight per cent) hold much less sway.
With the properties on the UK market unlikely to provide much choice to match these aspirational choices, it seems families are more practical when it comes to choosing their own home. Less than one in five homeowners (19 per cent) want to move in to a house that requires no work and, despite the labour involved, 62 per cent would be willing to make structural changes to their next property.
Although the communal spaces of Ramsay Street prove to be an attractive feature for most UK families, just a handful of homeowners (seven per cent) looked for open plan properties when choosing their current home.
However, partly thanks to the plethora of property programmes, the Grand Designs generation are more likely to take their home to task in order to get what they want.
76 per cent of homeowners between the ages of 18 and 40 would look to knock down walls to create the perfect living space in their next home
65 per cent of all homeowners would add extra space by converting a loft or basement in their home
Nearly two thirds (65 per cent) of homeowners will look to add an extension when they move to their next property.
Stephen Noakes, commercial director of mortgages at Halifax, said, "There's often a difference between the dream home and the reality of more traditional properties on the market but now, more than ever, people are willing to take on their own project. Whether it's knocking down walls, converting unused space or extending – homeowners are less willing to compromise, and so are creating the perfect living space."