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Archive for October, 2006

Plans for Budapest’s Tallest Building

Monday, October 30th, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in Budapest Property, Hungarian Property

Austrian based Raiffeisen International Bank AG is planning on building a 110-meter (361 feet) building in north Budapest making it 14 meters higher than the Hungarian capital’s Parliament and St. Stephen’s cathedral, which are currently the tallest buildings in Budapest.

The complex will also include smaller buildings for residential and retail use, as well as offices for rent. The building is due to be completed by 2009 and will house 1,500 of Raiffeisen International Bank’s 3,700 Budapest based workers. The complex will have total floor space of 60,000 square meters (645,835 square feet) with a projected construction cost of about $134 million.

The building’s design have not yet been released by the architects as the ultimate building height still needs a special permit. Raiffeisen’s property unit currently manages about $862m worth of real estate making it control about 25% Hungary’s real estate market.

[Read the press release here]
[Architect website - Finta Studio]


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Fifth Avenue New York - World’s Most Expensive Shopping Street

Friday, October 27th, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in New York Property, United States Property

New York’s Fifth Avenue has retained its top position as the world’s most expensive shopping street in the world, according to Main Streets Across the World 2006, with unit rental on Fifth Avenue commanding an average of of US$1.35m per 1,000 sq ft/93 sq m per annum.

Ranking

2006

Ranking

2005

Country City Location €/sqm/year
US$/sq ft
/
year

1

1

USA New York 5th Avenue

11,364

1,350

2

2

Hong Kong Hong Kong Causeway Bay

9,544

1,134

3

3

France Paris Avenue des Champs Elysées

6,775

805

4

4

UK London New Bond Street

5,667

673

5

5

Japan Tokyo Ginza

5,486

652

6

6

Ireland Dublin Grafton Street

4,496

534

7

10

Switzerland Zurich Bahnhofstrasse

3,517

418

8

7

Australia Sydney Pitt Street Mall

3,294

391

9

8

South Korea Seoul Myeongdong

3,169

376

=10

9

Germany Munich Kaufingerstraße

3,000

356

=10

12

Greece Athens Ermou

3,000

356

THE WORLD’S MOST EXPENSIVE SHOPPING STREETS

Source: Cushman & Wakefield


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Booming China : ), Gloomy London : (

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in International Real Estate Trends

According to Jones Lang LaSalle, Shanghai is still a real estate hotspot for overseas institutional investors but not individuals. US$20.3 million was dished out on a high-end office block - Ocean Towers in downtown Shanghai. 16 other properties worth US$1 billion have been snapped up by foreign investors in the last 3 quarters. Read more about the deals here.

For those keen on investing in Dubai and the middle east, the 3rd edition of the International Property Show will be held in April 2007 at the Dubai International Exhibition Centre with exhibitors from UK, Germany, South Africa, India, Spain, Turkey, Bahrain, France, Malaysia as well as the UAE. In our opinion, its a good networking event to meet both high networth Middle-Eastern investors and developers alike.

On a scarier note an article from Bloomberg paints a gloomy picture of the London’s high end property market with predictions by Knight Frank of a drop of up to 50 per cent in price gains in 2007 as compared to 2006.

“The price of homes in London costing over 5 million pounds ($9.4 million) will gain 12 percent in 2007 compared with 25 percent this year, London-based Knight Frank said in an e-mailed report published today. U.K. prices will rise 6 percent next year, down from 9 percent in 2006, said Knight Frank.”


Who is buying into the Dubai Dream?

Monday, October 23rd, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in Dubai Property, UAE Property

Ever wondered which nationals are buying most into Dubai? Well according to Dubai’s Land Department, 3,164 UAE nationals natuarally top the list of freehold property owners, followed by (yes you guessed as much) 124 Brits, then 119 Indians, 59 Iranians and 39 Pakistanis. Read more here

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Seychelles: Paradise becomes Affordable

Friday, October 20th, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in African Property, Seychelles Property

Previously a reserve of rich and maybe infamous Seychelles, the island of 115 islands has just got a brand new man-made island added to it. The 116th Island called Eden has reclaimed 95 acres of land using the same technology used in The World Islands in Dubai.

Eden homes are an attempt to open Seychelles to a more main stream market with starting prices of £155,000 for small villas to £1.5m for large hearted buyers looking to snap up large sea facing villas. Read more about it here.

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India Tops Prospective Asian Investment Hotspots

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in Indian Property, South-East-Asia Property

A poll taken by Sama Dubai (a Dubai real estate developer) at the MIPIM Asia expo in Hong Kong had the following interesting Asian property stats:

  • The predicted potential growth prospects in India were the highest at 38 per cent due to a residential housing shortage of 60 million units & development of 4.3 million square metres of commercial property in the next 24 months. The hotspots cities identified were Chandigarh, Chennai and Kolkata.
  • At second place was the GCC (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia & UAE) with an anticipated growth rate of 34 per cent
  • Coming at the third place was China with an expected real estate growth rate of 28 per cent (and a forecasted economic growth of 9.9 per cent by the World Bank)
  • Other strong growth prospects were in Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, Malaysia and Taiwan

Asian countries currently attracting the highest foreign direct investment:

China - 35 per cent
India - 33 per cent
Japan - 12 per cent
GCC (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia & UAE) - 12 per cent
Australia - 6 per cent
Korea - 2 per cent

Top three key factors for international real estate investment decision making:

  1. Market conditions
  2. Micro and macro economic factors and
  3. Rental prospects

The commercial property price growth in Dubai from 2004 to 2006 was 200 per cent.

Read the full article here


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‘Boomtown Bahrain’ in the lead…

Sunday, October 8th, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in Bahrain Property, Middle Eastern Property

BAHRAIN is being hailed as a ‘boomtown’ after achieving the highest tourism growth in the GCC in the first quarter of this year - followed up by healthy summer figures.

Tourist arrivals in Bahrain soared by 30 per cent in the first quarter, way ahead of its nearest rival Dubai, which achieved 7pc growth, according to UN World Tourism Organisation figures.

Occupancy in five-star hotels also increased by a remarkable 20pc from last year, Five Star Hotel Owners Committee chairman Abdulrahman Morshed told the GDN.

The arrivals figures, first reported by the GDN in July, are mirrored in a report released by the Abu Dhabi Investment House (ADIH), which hails Bahrain as a ‘boomtown’ and predicts that the huge volume of real estate investment in the Gulf will continue.

“Judging on the results of the first quarter of this year, there is growth of up to 30pc,” said Mr Morshed.

“The hotel occupancy in Bahrain this summer was also exceptionally good.

“I think there are a lot of things that contributed to this growth this year.”

Mr Morshed said that when the Lebanon war broke out in July, tourists who had planned to visit there had come to Bahrain instead.

“This has contributed to the growth here, as Bahrain is just next door,” he said.

“Bahrain weather-wise is slightly better than Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and so for a change families came here to enjoy their summer holidays.

“I am sure we have benefited from that factor of the war in Lebanon.

“There were large groups of predominantly Saudi and Kuwaiti families in Bahrain this summer.”

Another factor would be the fact that businesses in Bahrain, compared to its neighbouring countries, remain active even during the summer.

“People here continue what they are doing in the summer,” said Mr Morshed. “Things do not die down because it is summer and the five-star hotels reducing their rates from BD54 to BD38 has helped in the growth.

“We continue to promote our properties in Bahrain and this encourages people to come and visit.”

But more needs to be done to attract more families to Bahrain, said Mr Morshed. “We still can’t compare the leisure side of tourism in Bahrain to Dubai,” he said.

“Children who visit Bahrain either have to have babysitters with them or go to shopping malls or cinemas and walk around in the cold air.

“There are not many attractions here for youngsters, unlike in Dubai, where there are theme parks.

“Bahrain needs these kind of attractions badly and hopefully as the Tourism Board becomes a reality here, we will focus on that shortage.”

But like Mr Morshed, ADIH remains hopeful that Bahrain will achieve further growth in tourism.

Its chief executive officer Rashad Janahi said that reservations for The Lagoon Bahrain, launched only in July, have passed the 60pc-mark.

The Lagoon Bahrain is the region’s first freehold commercial development on Bahrain’s $1 billion (BD378 million) Amwaj Islands.

“The speed with which investors are reserving this project consolidates our belief that the freehold real estate market in Bahrain and indeed throughout the Gulf is here to stay,” said Mr Janahi. “Tourism-driven retail and hospitality developments throughout the Gulf are continuing to drive the economy.

“New shopping centres, leisure attractions and hotels are enticing ever-increasing numbers of holiday-makers both from throughout the world and within the Gulf, driving more investment as a result.”

ADIH real estate executive director Nicholas Fraser explained the confidence spreading through the Gulf, suggesting that growth in the real estate sector has been further spurred in recent months with the shift from the residential market towards commercial property development.

“One reason that Dubai is the biggest destination brand in the Gulf is due to its introduction of the residential real estate freehold concept, where individuals could own their properties for a period of years,” he said.

“Dubai not only introduced this before other cities, it also allowed a much easier flow of expatriate visitors and residents than its regional counterparts.

“Bahrain has now taken the lead in the area of commercial property, with The Lagoon Bahrain providing premium freehold opportunities for new concept food and beverage outlets and boutique retail, a first for the Gulf, which has previously only offered rented commercial space.”

In tandem, Bahrain has stepped up efforts to build its tourism infrastructure with construction underway on theme parks, entertainment venues, hotels and property, and many more plans are said to be in the pipeline.

“The 2004 addition of Bahrain to the Formula One Grand Prix circuit gave tourism in the country a great boost,” said Mr Fraser. “The Lagoon Bahrain is set to join the list of landmark ‘must visit’ destinations for visitors to the Gulf.”

The 1km long, waterside, retail and dining destination sits in the company of London’s Covent Garden and Cockle Bay Wharf in Sydney, with top-flight stores and restaurants open throughout the day and into night from September next year.

Source: Gulf Daily News

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Bulldozed: Britons’ dream of Spanish sun turns to nightmare

Saturday, October 7th, 2006    Posted by Overseas Property Mall in Buyers Beware, Spanish Property

Denis and Pat Archer bought a villa in Catral to start a new life in the Spanish sun. But now a civic corruption scandal may mean bulldozers destroy those dreams for ever.

They are typical of the hundreds of British expats whose homes may be torn down because they were built without planning permission. They all bought three-bedroom villas with swimming pools outside this town near Alicante, on the Costa Blanca. But the houses were built inside a nature reserve or on green belt land on the edge of this farming town.

The Valencia regional government has stripped Catral council of all its powers and threatened to dissolve the council over the scandal.

A court has launched an investigation into claims that builders bribed town hall officials to turn a blind eye to building laws and grant permission for the houses on green-belt land. Property certificates were also allegedly falsified.

Esteban Gonzalez Pons, housing director for the Valencian government, said: “The homes built on protected land inside El Hondo Nature Reserve will all be demolished. The future of the remaining homes will be studied on an individual basis.”

In a warning to local authorities across the region, he added: “We will not hesitate in acting against other town halls that break the law, whichever political party holds power.”

The villas cost on average €200,000 (£135,000).

Mr Archer said: “Our house was finished on time and was very nicely built. The problem our solicitors failed to notice was that neither our home nor the others on the complex had planning permission.

“The local town hall are now threatening to demolish the lot, leaving us to try to recoup our losses from the solicitor or the builder. Our dreams of a new life in the sun have turned into a nightmare.”

Charles Svoboda, president of Urban Abuses No, a campaign group against property corruption, said: “This is a positive and overdue step towards eliminating the arbitrary tyrannical exercise of this sort of power by local administrations.”

In March, the central government dissolved Marbella city council after the mayor, head of planning and 15 other officials and property developers were arrested in connection with a €3bn bribery scandal. Hundreds of British property owners in Marbella fear their homes may share the same fate as the expats in Catral.

Source: The Independent

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