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Builders get redevelopment blues

With the property market showing bearish tendencies and liquidity crisis plaguing developers, redevelopment projects in the city are being dropped like hot potatoes.

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Several deals to rebuild old housing complexes have fallen through

MUMBAI: With the property market showing bearish tendencies and liquidity crisis plaguing developers, redevelopment projects in the city are being dropped like hot potatoes.

The once headline-grabbing deals, including Vivek society, the Kalina  complex where 550 sq ft flat owners were offered upwards of Rs2 crore per flat, have fallen through with developers backing out of MoUs with housing complexes.

The schemes involved pulling down old housing complexes and rebuilding them, with the enhanced FSI, so that the existing flat owners get bigger houses and the builder benefits by selling the excess houses. A seemingly win-win situation till a few months back, there are no takers for it now.

Wadhwa Builders is learnt to have cancelled plans to redevelop Vishal Nagar in Borivili (east). A MoU signed by Pune-based Kumar Builders to redevelop Khira Nagar on SV road at Santa Cruz (west) has fallen apart. Revoking his earlier offer of Rs300 crore, a developer is now willing to pay barely Rs220 crore to a cooperative housing society on a 7,000-sq yard plot at Vile Parle (east).

A well-known developer is learnt to be now renegotiating the redevelopment deal with two societies: Flying Carpet and Tirupati located near Khar Gymkhana.  Turn to p12

Instead of his earlier offer of providing an additional space of 35% to every flat owner, the developer now does not want to part with anything over 25%. Similar is the case with Navyug Nagar Cooperative Housing Society on SV Road at Dahisar. Five reputed builders have now offered to provide additional 25% space to the 200-odd residents occupying flats admeasuring a little over 500 sq ft.

“Developers do not have the money power,’’ said a Santa Cruz-based broker-turned-developer, adding, ``With the result, they are unable to pay the exorbitant rate they offered earlier.’’

There is another reason, says Harendra Pandya, vice-president of Real Estate Agents Association of India. ``Redevelopment of societies has not taken off as developers are finding it unfeasible to pay the current stamp duty rate to convey (transfer) ownership of land from a society constructed in the 1980s to its name,’’ Pandya said.

“The already dipping sales are affecting their cash flow and if they have to pay high stamp duty for redevelopment, it would make a big dent in the developers’ calculations. No wonder redevelopment deals are going slow,’’ he said.

On 11th Road, Khar, a society of 14 members have grudgingly accepted a developer’s bid to give only 20% additional space to its existing 1,000 sq ft flats. ``Negotiations had broken down between us as a well-known developer had offered to give them a huge corpus. Six months later, they came back to me as the developer had started making excuses,’’ said a suburban developer.

Said Kalina-based estate broker Umesh Lad, “Redevelopment deals of societies like New Vinay, Shanti Niketan are learnt to have not materialised as a developer backed out from his earlier promise of purchasing the flats at an outright rate of around Rs35,000 a sq ft. The societies had earlier got an offer from reputed developers including Kalapatru.’’

Other redevelopment deals that fell through include Vivek Society near Mumbai Unversity, Kalina, with Sterling Biotech backing out from its offer of over Rs40,000 a sq ft, Parkbay Society and Kirti Society where residents have been offered roughly Rs35,000 a sq ft.

Though Boman Irani of Keystone Developers was unavailable for comment, brokers say there are problems in the redevelopment scheme at DN Nagar police station, Andheri (west). Keystone is developing nine ground-plus-four buildings jointly with Vaidehi Akash, a small-time builder, who reportedly raised funds by pre-booking at rates that were roughly 35% less than the market rate.

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