Flying
high above the New Dubai
For a developer's eye view of construction
projects in Dubai, AME Info is indebted to Mellon Global Investments
for a helicopter tour. This revealed the full extent of construction
activity now creating the New Dubai, the fastest growing city in
the world.
One thing that was immediately apparent
from a property buyer's perspective is that 'location, location,
location' is going to be far more important in the marketplace
than it has been in the past.
Gazing down from HeliDubai helicopter
the developments of New Dubai are scattered across the desert, and
out into the sea. But some are close to clusters of economic activity,
such as the Emirates Hills and Dubai Marina and the free zones.
The other extreme is The World - where the islands are more than
four kilometres offshore.
In the first three years of freehold
property right in Dubai, you could sell anything in any location.
That is because the market came from a position of no supply and
high demand. Now the supply of property is large and growing massively,
and buyers can afford to be more particular.
Location more important
What does this mean for pricing? Again in the initial years of freehold
developers charged mainly by size of property, with little regard
for location. That was before traffic jams became a fact of life
in Dubai, and before people actually had to live in homes in certain
locations.
Now in the re-sale market buyers can
re-assess the desirability of locations that looked great off the
original plan, but are rather less convenient to actually live in.
Flying over the Palm, Jumeirah it was
evident that the villas are more tightly packed on to the fronds
than many people might have assumed from the original plans. Will
this then actually prove to be the most desirable address in Dubai?
Will the access from the mainland also be a hurdle?
We will not know the answer to these
questions until the marketplace has voted with its money. And that
could well be down to the wives of millionaires rather than the
actual investors.
From the air, the extent of Dubai's
commitment to reclaimed islands is very clear. The second Palm,
Jebel Ali is in an advanced state of reclamation, and the third,
Palm, Deira, is starting to rise from the sea, quite apart from
the islands of The World, which are spread over a much wider area
than you might imagine.
Delivering on promises
If nothing else these very innovative projects have caught the imagination
of property buyers around the world, and fired the Dubai real estate
building boom. The more difficult stage will now be to prove to
owners that they are an attractive and desirable place to live.
Nakheel is clearly working hard on this,
and the highway interchange from the Sheikh Zayed Road is going
to be awesome. From the helicopter we could also see that this highway
is to run in a cut-and-cover tunnel to the outer ring of The Palm,
Jumeirah; there is a cut-an-cover tunnel being built that would
be a major project in its own right in any other city.
So could this be the time to buy
an apartment or villa on The Palm, just when the doubters are worrying
about the final result? Given Dubai's past track record at delivering
major projects against the voices of the critics, that might be
a fair conclusion.
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