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The rise and rise of Bulgarian
property Matthew Brunwasser - International
Herald Tribune |
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Anyone who has bought property in The Balkan country already has had 12 years of
increases. And the National Statistical Institute reported in January that
the average sales price per square meter for residential properties in
Bulgarian cities had gone up 36.6 percent in the previous year. But residential prices in Those numbers have pushed Foreigners were involved in 23 percent of the 220,000
property deals registered in Overall, real estate is one of the fastest growing
sectors in the national economy, which grew by 5.2 percent in 2005. Observers
say that while the foreign interest certainly has not hurt, the country
itself is producing much of the change. "I don't think this kind of growth can be supported
by international investors," said Milan Khatri,
chief economist at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors in Much of the interest is linked to the country's expected
entry into the European Union. Construction costs, sales prices and incomes are all
expected to jump after membership, fuelling a "now or never" air of
urgency among citizens and foreigners alike. "If the prices are so low, people assume the prices
must go up a lot, which means that the GDP and incomes will catch up with the
EU average," Khatri said. However, he
cautioned, "they may never take off." At the end of World War II, 85 percent of In the years after the collapse of communism, Deyan Kavrakov,
a partner with Equest Investments Bulgaria and a
specialist in luxury properties, says about two-thirds Isolde Pringiers,
an interior designer from Belgium who moved to Sofia with her husband and two
children in 1998, said, "Some of the best work is now being done by
interior decorators who are going into building." "They are traveling, they
subscribe to the international magazines, they are very well informed," Pringiers said. "They go to the Milan Fair to see
what's going on. They have much more of a sense of space and how you
live." When she bought her house in 1999, there was far less to
choose from than there is now. She searched for months before finding what
she described as a house "with a spirit." It was built in 1939 by a
German architect, and she fell in love with it and renovated it. Kavrakov said he finds affluent
professional Bulgarians in their 30s - the first generation to reach
adulthood after communism - are developing a taste for modern minimalist
interiors with integrated high-tech systems: blinds, air- conditioning, audio
systems, security and lighting. "There are excellent examples in the
area of contemporary modern style with more space," he said. While Also, the rental market is in its infancy. The rate of home
ownership is one of the highest in the world - more than 90 percent - so few
Bulgarians rent. Foreigners who are thinking of investment, or who are
planning to help finance the purchase of a vacation home by renting it when
they are not using it, should first think about how to find tenants. The property market is linked to tourism one of But now, according to Orlin Vladikov,
chairman of the national property association, green spaces are being
preserved and the country's policy makers have learned "not just from
bad experience but also from best international practices." "It's not easy," Vladikov
said. "But it's happening." |