Top 3 Realty Investment Destinations in Kolkata

People who are planning to invest in Kolkata this year, Kolkata’s EM Bypass, Behala, and Rajarhat are consistently on the buyers’ mind for some time now. Lower asset values and land prices, availability of scalable infrastructure and the government’s development initiatives make Kolkata an ideal investment option.

The city’s 21 km EM Bypass connects the northern hub of Ultadanga to Kamalgazi in the south. Many residential and commercial establishments are coming up along this stretch. New projects here include Urban Sabujayan by Envision Realty, Altius by Pioneer Property Management Pvt Ltd, Shell Tech by Shell Tech Construction, Heights by Sukriti Realty, etc. In the Oct-Dec quarter, prices along EM Bypass price increased by 6 per cent to Rs 5,354 per sq ft as compared to Rs 5,054 per sq ft in Jul-Sept quarter. One of prime reasons for its popularity is its proximity to malls, 5-star hotels, education institutions/universities, hospitals, schools, metro rail, etc. The government has plans to build a 40-metre bridge across the Guniagachha canal while a flyover connecting EM Bypass with Park Circus and existing AJC Bose Road Flyover is under construction.

Behala is one of the major suburbs of Kolkata. It is brimming with residential projects by developers such as Merlin Projects Ltd and Swabhumi Real Estate India Ltd. The average locality price firmed up by 5 per cent in Oct-Dec quarter to Rs 3,579 per sq ft in comparison to Rs 3,421 during Jul-Sep quarter. Behala is well connected by buses, trams, taxis and metro railway. The nearby markets, hospitals, schools make the area perfect for residence. Behala also creates a huge demand for 2BHK properties.

Rajarhat, now known as New Town is located in North 24 Parganas district. The newly established township consists of gated high-rise complexes by 21st Century Realty, Siddha Group, Kwality Realtech Pvt Ltd and Mount Hill Realty Pvt Ltd. The average locality price was Rs 3,579 per sq ft in the Oct-Dec quarter, up 5 per cent from Rs 3,421 in Jul-Sept quarter. Rajarhat has major hospitals, malls, parks, clubs, 5-star hotels, etc. The connectivity of this locality depends upon buses, taxis and metro. The Data shows response towards Rajarhat is tremendous. The price of property as well as land is increasing every year therefore the best time to invest is right now.

Source: Aawas.in

Real Estate Developers Vie for Prime Kolkata Property

While the real estate market in most metros appears to be cooling off, Kolkata continues to retain the interest of the big ticket developers. A five acre plot off the Eastern Metropolitan Bypass has been put up for auction by the Kolkata Municipal Corporation, eliciting attention from real estate developers like DLF, Emaar MGF, Indiabulls, Bengal Realty, Reliance Engineering and Paharpur Cooling Towers.

Located opposite the Science City and near the ITC Sonar, the KMC is offering the property on a 99-year lease for a commercial or residential project.

57 companies have bought the request for proposal (RFP) document which details the auction process for the property. The bids have to be submitted by October 15, and will be opened on October 16.

It is understood that half the proceeds from the auction would be directed towards an art gallery in Rajarhat.

Meanwhile, Kolkata real estate received a fillip with the Infinite India Group tying up with the Shrachi Group.

Infinite will invest Rs.200 crore in the real estate projects of the group over the next year.

Source: NRI Realty Estate

No solution yet to Joka Metro land row

KOLKATA: Ongoing Metro projects in Kolkata have run into rough weather, thanks to the hands-off attitude of the very person who initiated them in the first place – Mamata Banerjee. Subodh Jain, member engineering and member staff, Railway Board, who inspected the Joka-BBD Bag stretch on Saturday morning, admitted that it has run into trouble as land is not readily available.

“We are having trouble acquiring land for the car-shed in Joka. We have also not yet received clearance from the ministries of finance and defence for use of their land. We will also require some land belonging to the Kolkata Port Trust for completion of the project. However, work is continuing on the remaining stretch at a good pace,” Jain said during his visit.

While the Rail Vikas Nigam Ltd is in charge of implementation of the project, Metro Railway will have to acquire nearly 25 hectares for the car-shed. A notification was issued for acquisition of 24.47 hectares in the Sakharipota, Rasapunja, Bonogram, Kalagachhia and Hanspukuria mouzas in South 24-Parganas. The land is nearly 1.5 km from the Behala tram depot along the alignment of the Churial canal. While people have refused to part with their land in these mouzas, officials don’t want to make use of The Metro Railways (Construction of Works) Act, 1978, that allows it to acquire any land, building, street, road or passage.

“This act allows Metro Railway to acquire any land that it may require for a project.

The owners can’t refuse to hand over the land, but can only claim compensation. If they are not satisfied with the compensation granted by Metro, they can seek a hearing. This is when a judicial officer can ask the Metro to increase the sum. However, in no case can the Metro be asked not to acquire land. It is unfortunate that officials don’t want to make use of this act. It is possible that they don’t want a confrontation with the state government which has made clear that forcible acquisition will not be allowed,” a highly placed source said.

Mamata Banerjee, when she was railway minister, had got then President Pratibha Patil to lay the foundation stone of the Joka-BBD Bag stretch. Mamata had then said that the project is of national importance and wouldn’t face any hurdles. After she took over as chief minister, it was expected that the going would be smooth. However, things changed once she quit the UPA. She announced that no land can be acquired by force, even if it is occupied by squatters.

Metro general manager Radhey Shyam, when asked about the problems faced by projects to the north of the city, said that encroachers were posing a problem. “The state government has made it clear that it will do nothing to remove encroachers. The only way to proceed is if the encroachers agree to move by themselves,” he said.

Source: The Times of India

Mumbai real estate: Boom and bust at the same time

MUMBAI: A recent wave of building collapses has brought attention to this city’s large number of poorly built structures. It feels as if every week brings fresh reports of a new disaster. The death toll is expected to rise with the monsoons.

News media and political attention have mostly focused on the vast stock of old buildings from the pre-independence period and immediately after. Yet old age wasn’t the cause of the collapse of a building in Thane, a city on the outskirts of Mumbai, that killed around 74 people in April. That building was still under construction. (And, like a majority of buildings in Thane, the construction was illegal – neither authorized nor overseen by any official agency.) Old age cannot explain the caving in of a 34-year-old building that killed at least 10 people near here last month either, nor the collapse of a building, about a decade old, that killed at least six people and injured more than two dozen last week.

Intangible factors, like faulty urban policies and unchecked real-estate speculation, bear the prime responsibility.

Most of the recent casualties have taken place in the far periphery of Mumbai, where one finds a sprawling landscape of hastily built residential blocks meant to absorb white-collar middle-class Mumbaikars who struggle to find anything even remotely affordable in the city. Many of them commute for hours daily in trains so packed that people routinely fall out – collateral damage of the speculative euphoria.

A bombastic real estate sector has simultaneously pushed up the price and heights of buildings, accelerated the speed of construction and lowered the quality of new structures in and around Mumbai. Many properties are conceived primarily as assets, to be bought and sold to investors. Owners often prefer empty flats because they can be traded more easily. This partly explains why, according to a government census in 2011, nearly half a million houses and flats are vacant in one of the most crowded metropolitan areas on earth.

Officially, the promotion of a vertical skyline has been justified on the grounds that high-rise structures are the only possible response to Mumbai’s huge population and land shortage. Dozens of skyscrapers, 300 feet high or higher, are under construction in Mumbai. Investors are planning to build, at around 2,300 feet, the world’s second tallest structure.

But the argument for verticalization has long been rejected by architects and city planners. Every vertical push also requires a horizontal spread – new high-rise inhabitants need access roads, open space and other services. Besides, the higher you build, the more expensive the construction and maintenance.

High-rise structures are also outside the budget of India’s low-income groups, which explains why, in the last decade, south Mumbai has seen both more high-rise buildings and a declining population.

Following the same faulty logic, the authorities are promoting the transformation of slums, which can be found in all parts of the city and where over 60 percent of the population is said to be living. Since the 1990s, the Slum Rehabilitation Authority has offered to let investors raze slums and redevelop the land, so long as they devote part of the site to new housing for the displaced residents.

Inevitably, that housing is squeezed into high-rises, in order to leave as much land open for development as possible. These structures are often shoddily built disasters. Maintenance is expensive, and rust, leaking roofs and cracked walls are common after only a few years. In addition, the buildings are not amenable to the kind of home-based economic activities and street retailing that characterized the old neighborhoods. Eventually, many sell and move out to a slum.

Source: The Economic Times

Realty regulatory bill to be introduced in Monsoon session

NEW DELHI: The real estate regulatory bill that seeks to bring transparency and accountability in the realty sector will be introduced in the monsoon session of Parliament, a top government official said today.

Last month, the Cabinet had approved the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Bill, that seeks to provide a uniform regulatory environment to the sector.

“The Bill will be introduced in the Monsoon session of Parliament,” Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation Secretary Arun Kumar Misra said at an annual convention of National Association of Realtors (NAR) India.

The Bill will be sent to Parliamentary Standing Committee for consideration and suggestions, Misra said.

The month-long Monsoon session of Parliament is expected to start in late July.

Misra also disagreed with developers’ contention that prices would rise by 30 per cent once this Bill is passed in the Parliament.

“All that the regulatory Bill says that when you start selling the flats, all the licenses and permissions should be in place,” the secretary said.

Stating that the Bill deals with property brokers and agents as well, Misra assured the brokers’ body NAR that they would be included in the list of associations to be consulted by the Standing Committee. He asked the brokers to bring more professionalism in their business.

NAREDCO, an industry body of real estate developers, President Naveen Raheja emphasised on the need of self- regulation.

NAR-India is an industry body for property brokers and it has 1,700 members. They are affiliated to the national association of realtors (NAR), a global association based in Chicago, USA.

The Bill provides for setting up a regulator for the real estate sector and has provisions like a jail term of up to three years for developers who make offences like putting up misleading advertisements about projects repeatedly.

It also intends to make it mandatory for developers to launch projects only after acquiring all statutory clearances from relevant authorities. The Bill makes it mandatory for builders to clarify the carpet area of the flat.

Source: The Economic Times