Deyaar, which once focused primarily on high-rise buildings, is shifting its focus to low-cost housing. Industry Summits Reuters
Deyaar, which once focused primarily on high-rise buildings, is shifting its focus to low-cost housing.
DUBAI (Reuters) - Dubai developer Deyaar DEYR.DU, which on Monday announced it had cut 20 percent of its workforce, said it will re-start developing projects in 2010 and set up co-investment funds for its overseas expansion plans.
"2009 was a development holiday. In 2010 we have to start developing again," Markus Giebel, the firm's chief executive told the Reuters Middle East Investment Summit on Tuesday.
Dubai's second-largest listed developer, which plans to double the size of its property portfolio over the next five years, has handed over seven projects to investors in the third quarter and committed to six more in 2010, it said earlier in October.
Giebel said on Tuesday he hoped to close the firm's 500 million dirham ($136.1 million) distressed debt fund by the end of the year and would "attempt" to launch a co-investment fund in 2010 of similar size.
The firm is looking at several expansion opportunities across the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia and Lebanon, but would take its time in identifying projects, he said.
"The shelf life of a product in 2008 was two to four days. Now the shelf life is six to twelve months so we have all the time in the world to make a decision," he said, adding the firm had over 500 million dirhams of cash to spend.
"100 million dirhams investment goes a long way ... 100 million dirhams gives you a billion dirhams of development in a joint venture structure."
Deyaar, which once focused primarily on high-rise buildings, is shifting its focus to villas and low-cost housing.
Showing posts with label village. Show all posts
Showing posts with label village. Show all posts
Low cost housing developments - moladiVILLAGE
A Pattern Language
We begin with that part of the language which defines a town or community. These patterns can never be "designed" or "built" in one fell swoop- but patient piecemeal growth, designed in such a way that every individual act is always helping to create or generate these larger global patterns, will, slowly and surely, over the years, make a community that has these global patterns in it.
Do what you can to establish a world government, with a thousand independent regions, instead of countries.
Independent Regions
With each region work toward those regional policies which will protect the land and mark the limits of the cities.
The Distribution of Towns
City Country Fingers
Agricultural Valleys
Lace of Country Streets
Country Towns
The Countryside
Connect communities to one another by encouraging the growth of networks.
Web of Public Transportation
Ring Roads
Network of Learning
Web of Shopping
Mini-Buses
Between the house clusters, around the centers, and especially in the boundaries between neighborhoods, encourage the formation of work communities;
Work Community
Industrial Ribbon
University as a marketplace
Local Town Hall
Necklace of Community Projects
Market of Many Shops
Health Center
Housing Inbetween
Within the framework of the common land, the clusters, and the work communities encourage transformation of the smallest independent social institutions: the families, workgroups, and gathering places. the family, in all its forms.
The Family
House for a Small Family
House for a Couple
House for One Person
Your Own Home
This is how developments must be done!!
We begin with that part of the language which defines a town or community. These patterns can never be "designed" or "built" in one fell swoop- but patient piecemeal growth, designed in such a way that every individual act is always helping to create or generate these larger global patterns, will, slowly and surely, over the years, make a community that has these global patterns in it.
Do what you can to establish a world government, with a thousand independent regions, instead of countries.
Independent Regions
With each region work toward those regional policies which will protect the land and mark the limits of the cities.
The Distribution of Towns
City Country Fingers
Agricultural Valleys
Lace of Country Streets
Country Towns
The Countryside
Connect communities to one another by encouraging the growth of networks.
Web of Public Transportation
Ring Roads
Network of Learning
Web of Shopping
Mini-Buses
Between the house clusters, around the centers, and especially in the boundaries between neighborhoods, encourage the formation of work communities;
Work Community
Industrial Ribbon
University as a marketplace
Local Town Hall
Necklace of Community Projects
Market of Many Shops
Health Center
Housing Inbetween
Within the framework of the common land, the clusters, and the work communities encourage transformation of the smallest independent social institutions: the families, workgroups, and gathering places. the family, in all its forms.
The Family
House for a Small Family
House for a Couple
House for One Person
Your Own Home
This is how developments must be done!!
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