Tag: building


New Apartments

June 4th, 2009 — 10:13am

From the end of 2008 the number of new buildings in Bulgaria has decreased by 432 and the number of the apartments in them has decreased by 42.8%.

The greatest number of new apartments still are completed on the Bulgarian Black Sea coast. Only in Burgas district 1136 new apartments have been finished this winter. In second place is Varna district with 727 newly finished apartments, followed by Sofia with 580 and Plovdiv with 265. There are no new apartments in Stara Zagora and Kyustendil.

The area of the newly finished apartments in the first quarter of 2009 is 294 000 sq m which is a decrease by 16% in comparison with the same period of 2008. The size of the average living area has also diminished from 78.3 to 75.5 sq m in the same period.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

The overseas property dream that continues to end in nightmares

June 1st, 2009 — 12:21pm

Jessie Hewitson, The Observer

Back in 2006, Andrew and Pat Pryce decided to buy an investment property in Bulgaria. With retirement looming, they were hoping for rental income to supplement their pension, and a flat they could eventually sell on at a profit. When they read on the internet about the Mechi Chal mountain lodge in Pamporovo, advertised by overseas property agent Someplace Else as “the most exclusive in Bulgaria’s booming ski resorts” and offering a guaranteed rental yield of 7% a year for the first three years, they put down a deposit of £19,485.

It was a year later, in 2007, that they had the first inkling that something might be wrong. No one was asking them for more money, and there seemed to be no evidence that building was taking place. By 2008, they were so concerned with the lack of progress that they went to Bulgaria and drove around Pamporovo to investigate for themselves.

“We couldn’t see any sign of the development,” says Andrew. “On a second visit we attempted to locate the agency’s Bulgarian office in Plovdiv, but found it inhabited by another company.”

Having lost faith that the development would ever be built, the Pryces asked for their deposit to be returned. They say Someplace Else agreed to this more than a year ago but, despite being promised the money on three occasions, they have received only £2,000. They have now consulted a lawyer.

The Pryces are not alone. Since January 2008, the Association of International Property Professionals (AIPP) – a voluntary organisation with 376 members – has received 116 formal complaints from buyers unhappy about purchases abroad.

The number of people who have lost money in projects around the world is likely to be far higher than most realise, partly because nobody is keeping a record, and partly because those who have lost money are too embarrassed – and upset – to talk about it.

John Howell, senior partner in the International Law Partnership, specialising in overseas property purchases, estimates that 20% of those who have bought off-plan in the past two years are likely to run into “significant difficulty”. According to AIPP estimates, in 2007 193,600 of us bought property in the 10 countries most favoured by British buyers. This means more than 38,000 may be in hot water from just a single year’s overseas property purchases – and some may not even realise it yet.

The collapse of Churchill Properties Overseas alone meant about 340 investors, mainly British and Irish, lost deposits worth an estimated £4m. The company, which sold property in Estonia, Cape Verde and Goa, went into “voluntary liquidation” last summer.

Out of pocket

Another high-profile company, Bulgarian Dreams, closed at the end of 2008 and is currently being investigated by the City of London Police economic crime department. It is impossible to know exactly how many of its investors – who have bought in more than 40 developments in the eastern European country – have been left out of pocket.

Some of the estimated 100-150 investors who, like the Pryces, bought off-plan apartments in the Mechi Chal lodge, are leaving desperate posts on property forums and seeking legal action to get their money back.

Ben Mason, a partner of Someplace Else, says the delays have been caused by the local water authority rescinding permission it had previously granted. He is hoping to get it reinstated. “Providing this happens in the next two months, we can get the first phase finished by December this year and the second phase completed by December next year,” he says.

Mason admits the development is hard to find, but claims that the foundations are in place for phase one, many of the houses have been built off-site and when they do get water permission, the Bulgarian office will reopen.

As for the Pryces’ deposit, he says: “Due to the current economic climate, it has taken us longer than we expected to make this refund from the UK … however, there is no question of the Pryces not receiving the balance of their deposit, with interest, over the next few weeks.”

Howell notes that the developers in trouble are not typically local but British would-be Donald Trumps, and new to the game. “Many of these developers probably started off with good intentions but soon got in over their heads,” he says. “Whether it was fraud or bad economic times is a moot point, frankly, because the end result is the same: people lose money.”

Bad lands

Derek Smythe (not his real name) is more than aware of his predicament, and resigned to losing the £30,000 he invested in 2006 into a company that promised to buy land in Montenegro, get planning permission, build and sell on.

“Since investing the money, I’ve had virtually no communication from the directors [both British],” he says. “There’s no evidence that the money was used to purchase any land at all – I have absolutely no idea what happened to it. It’s been pretty miserable – and the worst thing is, it’s all my fault as I didn’t ask enough questions.”

The sums of money being lost are vast: Howell recently met 70 people, mainly Britons, who had sunk an average of €80,000 (£70,000) into a troubled development in Bulgaria.

He also has clients who regret buying in Dubai. “The problem is that all the major building companies belong to the royal family, and you won’t find a lawyer who will sue.”

The range of people losing money this way spans class, gender and age: young, old, working class, middle class, the gullible, the naive and the greedy are all suffering alike.

“I’ve got clients who are working-class people who invested the £20,000 equity they had in their home, and high-flying professionals who frankly ought to have known better,” says Howell, adding that one client who got stung was a partner in a chartered accountancy firm.

Many of these problems would not have happened if the investors had sought the advice of a good lawyer – something that many of the people interviewed for this article bitterly regret not doing.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Prices of Luxury Properties Drop

May 18th, 2009 — 2:22pm

Unlike earlier expectations the market of luxury property in Bulgaria has also experienced price decreases. Rich buyers bargain and refuse to pay the high prices for top properties in the Bulgaria. As result prices of luxury properties have dropped by 1 million levs on average according to market analysts. The most striking example is a luxury apartment close to the National Theatre in Sofia which appeared on the market last year with asking price of 2 million Euros. The total area of the apartment was 253 sq m and this was the top price for the country – of 7905 EUR per sq m. The apartment is located in a listed building constructed in 1912. A year later the seller has dropped the asking price to 1,5 million EUR or 5929 EUR per sq m.

At the same time the price of a house close to Perla Hotel in Dragalevsty has dropped by half a million Euros to 2,5 million EUR. The total area of the three-flour house is 900 sq m and it has 7 bedrooms and six bathrooms as well as inside pool, jacuzzi and sauna.

Another striking example of a price decrease of a luxury property is in the affluent suburb of Plovdiv – the village of Markovo. A year ago this property, with total are of 2417 sq m used to sell for 2,5 million EUR. In the last few months its price has dropped to 2 million Euros.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Office Rents

April 14th, 2009 — 11:00am

Sofia is in third place among the European capitals in terms of profitability of office space. A high quality office building can have a 10% annual return. Only the Russian capital Moscow (11.5%) and the Ukrainian capital Kiev (14%) are rating better than Sofia. The profitability of office space in the Bulgarian capital has increased by 3% or 300 points from its lowest position three years ago. The figures for Belgrade are similar – 10% – while for the other Balkan cities this ratio varies from 7% to 8.5%. Only offices in the Romanian capital Bucharest show higher annual return of 9.5%. The more developed markets of office space like Prague, Budapest and Warsaw have much lower levels of annual returns of 6.75 % – 7.75%.

The rent of office space in the Bulgarian capital has actually decreased by 6.85% in the last year and now is 17 EUR/sq.m. on average as it is linked to the decreasing prices of properties in general. There is similar decrease of office rent in Madrid, Dublin, Moscow, Kiev, Belgrade, Budapest, Warsaw and Bucharest. In the 15 older EU-member states the office rent has decreased by 4% on average.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

New Investors

April 6th, 2009 — 11:23am

Construction projects in Bulgaria exceeding 2,5 billion Euros have been put on hold because of the recession. There are a few large projects, which do not have problems with financing. The fear of bankruptcy and the lack of free money is the reason for the investors to give up their plans for big projects and to sell their business. Some developers are prepared to sell parts of their future developments at lower price just to be able to finish their projects. On 2 April 2009 they met with Russian investors at a business meeting organised in the Russian capital Moscow. There were different projects on offer – holiday homes, residential homes, power plants, regulated and unregulated land, concrete buildings and whole residential areas. However the accent was on holiday homes and golf courses throughout Bulgaria.

Apart from the Russians the other type of investors interested in Bulgaria are those from the Middle East. Some of them are prepared to put on hold their projects in their home countries in order to buy at low prices attractive projects in Europe and in the USA.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

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