Will sports cities inject adrenaline into the residential market?
Sports cities – townships conceived and executed on a sports-centric theme and lifestyle concept – are a unique emerging real estate trend in the country.
Sports cities – townships conceived and executed on a sports-centric theme and lifestyle concept – are a unique emerging real estate trend in the country.
Fire Capital, the first private equity fund focused on the…
Puravankara Projects has forayed into Coimbatore with a Rs.650 crore project, offering luxurious two and three bed room apartments.
India Property Fund, managed by NRI investor Purnendu Chatterjee’s TCG Real Estate and US-based Vornado Realty Trust, is in the final stages of investing Rs 270 crore in two residential developments in national capital region and Mumbai.
Hospitality firm Lemon Tree Hotels is foraying into real estate, with plans to invest over Rs.1,400 crore, to launch housing projects in India in partnership with US-based investment firm Warburg Pincus.
While the real estate market in India is far from satisfactory, a section of real estate developers are exploring opportunities in neighboring nations including Sri Lanka and Bangladesh as the governments, seeking to boost economic growth, are providing incentives to develop infrastructure.
According to the 2010 census, Mumbai now houses around 14 million people, which makes it India’s most populous city and the world’s second-most populous city.
Atlanta Ltd has announced that it is a company with deep rooted presence in three of the country’s fastest growing segments; infrastructure development, mining and realty.
After a one-year period starting 3Q 2009, which saw a strong recovery with a record 40%+ increase in prices, the Mumbai residential real estate market has been seeing a slowdown over the last two quarters across various micro markets.
Mumbai saw a steep rise in property prices during the boom period of 2008. However, the economic slowdown in 2009 led to a property market crash which made itself very tangible in Mumbai in the first quarter of 2009, stabilizing by the middle of year and rising again between the 3rd and 4th quarters.