Showing posts with label Realty-Chennai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Realty-Chennai. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Chennai commercial space expanding










Source:BL:Chennai:2 nd Oct 2011

After the recovery of the last two years in the residential space, the Chennai real estate market appears to be showing some activity in the commercial space with retail space supply and demand picking up and office space supply, particularly in non-IT segment, on the increase. 

But the market balance will favour tenants rather than owners for some time to come. In the next three years, the supply of office space in Chennai will reach approximately 60 million square feet, which will equal that in present day Mumbai, according to a study by the international property consultants Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL). 

This is good for prospective tenants looking for quality office space, says the study, titled ‘Chennai Real Estate, a closer look'.

Typically, for Chennai, commercial office space supply has seen an addition of approximately 20 million square feet, in the three years since 2006, with IT office space dominating the supply and demand. 

Between the third quarter of 2011 and the end of 2015, more than 17 million square feet of office space will be added, bringing the total availability on par with that in Mumbai, the commercial capital.

COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE

Though the IT space continues to be the primary driver of the market, in the current year there has been interest in office space leasing activity in the non-IT segment, as firms relocate offices to quality buildings.

Also, this dovetails with the dearth of high quality office space in the central areas, with new supply happening in the suburbs. The lease rates in the suburbs, along with the quality space, are driving the demand in the fringes of the city, accounting for the pattern that is being seen, says the study.

The rent for office properties in Chennai, after remaining stable for the last 6-7 quarters, is now on the increase in some of the secondary business districts. In the central business districts, the rent ranges around Rs 65-85 a square foot; in the secondary business districts it is Rs 45-55; and in the peripheral business districts, space is available for Rs 20-40.

The attractive rentals will drive the cost-sensitive clients to peripheral areas along the Old Mahabalipuram Road (OMR), the IT corridor to the south of Chennai. But the demand is restricted to areas closer to the city's fringes and is contributing to rental values firming up.


According to JLL statistics, of the available 55 million square feet of office space, net absorption in 2011 was approximately 36 million square feet. 

Next year, the supply is expected to increase to approximately 58 million square feet, with a net absorption of approximately 39 million square feet. In 2013, the gap between demand and supply is expected to close, with supply at 44 million and absorption at 41 million. Office space vacancy is expected to peak in 2012, at around 23 per cent, and drop subsequently.


However, IT and ITES continue to account for the lion's share of the market, contributing to approximately 60 per cent of the leases in 2010, with banking and financial services accounting for 9 per cent, and manufacturing 14 per cent, and others, the balance.


However, with the slowdown in the US and Europe, the IT industry could dampen the market during the coming year. The property consultant estimates that till 2015, office space uptake could range around 4 million square feet a year.

The huge supply of residential space anticipated during the next three-four years, estimated at approximately 71,000 units in the suburbs, is driving the supply of plaza space in the city's periphery, in anticipation of the demand that is bound to happen.

RETAIL SPACE AND PLAZAS

During the next three years, half a dozen plazas are likely to commence operations. New supplies are happening within the city and the periphery. 

The supply in plazas follows the initial focus on high streets, says the report. In terms of residential supply, there is a bias towards increased supply of high-end projects in the city, while there is a good mix of high and mid-end offerings in the suburbs.

The study categorises residential units of Rs 40-60 lakh as mid-end, and those less than Rs 40 lakh as value housing. But with new projects being offered at higher price points, the share of value housing, which was approximately 97 per cent in 2009, has dropped to approximately 4 per cent in 2011. 

This indicates the buoyancy in the market for residential space, which was the first to recover from the slowdown three years ago.

In the next three years, the supply of office space in Chennai will reach 60 million square feet, and half a dozen more plazas are likely to come up.

Monday, December 14, 2009

197 housing societies in state served liquidation notices-Chennai

77 To Be Wound Up In Chennai; Many Were Defunct For Yrs

The registrar of housing cooperative societies has 
issued liquidation notices to 197 housing societies
that have virtually been defunct for more than five years 
without any activity or transaction. Seventy-seven of the 
197 societies to be wound up are in Chennai.

These societies had come under the state housing 

department’s scanner following the busting of a
Rs 490-crore scam in some societies, which had 
allegedly diverted customers’ money for purposes
other than what it was intended for — clearing their
loan liability with the Tamil Nadu Cooperative
Housing Federation. Consequently, the housing 
department carried out reviews in all 1,035 societies in the state
— 816 are affiliated to the Tamil Nadu Housing Cooperative
Federation — and many issues ranging from availability
 of excess staff in some societies to total inaction in 
many others were brought to light.

While as many as 197 societies were issued notices

15 days ago for liquidation, another 214 have been
put on alert for transferring their assets and liabilities 
to better-performing ones, said the registrar of housing
cooperative societies, Dharmendra Pratap Yadav.

Most of them have assets and liabilities worth less
than Rs one crore each, said Yadav, adding that 
those assets would be adjusted against the liabilities
before they are merged with other societies.

“They have been given 30 days notice to reply to the liquidation notices.

Later, we will assess their finances,” he added. 

The Tamil Nadu Cooperative Housing Federation had 
stopped funding these societies in September after the 
scam surfaced. The federation, over the years, had 
provided Rs 4,753 crore as loan to societies and as
of now, there is an outstanding dues of Rs 1,168 crore.

In many cases, despite the members having paid the full 
money to the society concerned, the latter had not 
remitted it to the federation.

To maintain transparency and accountability 

in their activities, they were also instructed to close 
down all bank accounts and carry out financial transactions
only through escrow accounts to be opened in district cooperative banks.