
Neighbourhood in Barneveld
De Maat is located in the province of Gelderland, in the municipality of Barneveld, in the district Voorthuizen The neighbourhood has a total area of 23 hectares, of which 23 hectares are land and 0 hectares are water. The neighbourhood is coded as BU02035539. The postcode area is 3781DA-3781XH.
One resident rates the neighbourhood as very good with a score of 8.6. The resident describes this neighbourhood as 'Nice neighbourhood, beautiful spots'. Based on a limited number of reviews, no clear trends are visible yet in this neighbourhood.
De Maat has 1.380 residents. Of these, 50,4% are men and 49,6% are women. Most residents are 45 to 65 years (31,9%). The other age groups are 22,5% for '25 to 45 years', 16,7% for '0 to 15 years', 14,5% for '15 to 25 years' and 13,8% for '65 years or older'. Of the residents, 42,4% is unmarried, 49,3% is married, 6,5% is divorced and 1,1% is widowed. 1.285 residents originate from the Netherlands, 25 come from Europe and 65 come from countries outside Europe.
There are 555 households in De Maat. 27,0% of these are single-person households, 29,7% households without children and 43,2% households with children. The average household size is 2,5 persons.
In De Maat there are 1.200 income recipients. The average income per income recipient is €35.200, which is €600 (2%) lower than the national average of €35.800. Per resident, the average income is €29.100, which is €100 (0%) lower than the national average of €29.200. Most residents of De Maat are educated to an intermediate level. 50,4% have an intermediate education (HAVO, VWO or MBO 2-4), 26,5% have a university or higher professional education (HBO/WO) and 23,0% have a lower education (VMBO or MBO 1).
Of the 1.380 residents, around 76% are in paid employment, which amounts to 1.049 people. This is 11% higher than the national average of 65%. The majority of workers are in salaried employment (86%), while 14% are self-employed. In De Maat, 16% of residents receive a benefit. The largest group is those receiving a state pension (AOW). 160 people receive this benefit.
In De Maat there are 553 homes with an average assessed value (WOZ) of €414.000. Of these, around 99% are occupied and 1% unoccupied. Most homes are owner-occupied. This amounts to 23% rental homes and 77% owner-occupied homes. Of the homes, 77% privately owned, 17% owned by housing associations and 6% owned by other landlords. The most common construction periods in De Maat are 1990-2000 (59%) and 1980-1990 (34%).
There are currently no homes for sale in De Maat. The most recently listed home is Wagenmakerslaan 1 by Legemaat Makelaardij. No homes were sold in De Maat over the past year.
There are currently no homes for rent in De Maat. No homes were let in De Maat over the past year.
No recent rental data available for De Maat.
In De Maat there are 564 addresses with a registered energy label. The most common labels are B (50%), C (35%) and A (13%). On average, an address in De Maat uses 2.840 kWh of electricity per year. This is 1% above the national average of 2.810 kWh. With an annual consumption of 1.000 m³ per address, natural gas consumption is 22% below the national average of 1.280 m³.
Nice neighbourhood, lots of playgrounds and bushes where children can also play and meet each other.
Auto-translated to English by AIThe housing stock is relatively young — 63% dates from after 1990. In addition, the most common type is terraced houses (43%).
Over the past year a home for sale in De Maat was listed for an average of €502,475 (€4,025 per m²).
A rental home in De Maat cost an average of €1,425 per month (€19 per m²).
Buurt De Maat has 1,380 residents. The largest age group is 45 to 65 years (32%). Many families: 43% of the households have children.
The housing supply in De Maat is remarkably efficient: 67% has an A, A+ or B label. The average natural gas consumption per household is 1,000 m³ per year.
From De Maat you can on average reach a supermarket at 1.1 km, a GP at 1.3 km, a railway station at 3.5 km, a primary school at 0.6 km (as the crow flies, source: CBS).