support@kopiandproperty.com

Advertisements

Advertisement Banner

Property Prices, Prime Locations, Embassy Land Sale

Within the past two years, a few embassies have sold the land for which their building is on. The British High Commission sold theirs for RM294.97 million or RM2,200 per sq ft. Total land size was 1.22ha. (131,320 sf) It’s in Jalan Ampang. The German ambassador’s residence in Jalan Kia Peng is being valued at RM200 million or RM2,500 per sf. The latest one would be the French embassy which is bigger, at 3.23 ha (347,674sf). French Embassy’s deal would however be completed only later than October as it will be handled by its new ambassador who will only be arriving in Malaysia in October.
Personally I think this will continue because the rationale is simple. If you needed to go to the embassy, you will go to the embassy even if it is in Putrajaya. There is much to gain by the disposal of the land which has appreciated tremendously and no one knows if this value would continue to be so strong in the future especially with the continuous slow transactions for properties thus far. The embassies can gain a one off huge profits which can help to maintain their embassy better. Perhaps they can even expand their embassy size if it’s slightly further away. I think this will not be the last, which one is next? There are still the Spanish Embassy, the Royal Thai Embassy, Uzbekistan Embassy, Ecuador, Finland, Azerbaijan, Russian, Myanmar and many more in the smaller roads leading in from the main Embassy row.
In terms of new developments, these areas are considered very prime and many expats love to live there as it’s convenient to their working place. To be honest, none of these expats would be willing to drive through jams after jams everyday just to reach their office. Besides, irregardless of what we always think about ‘expensive’, the cost of maintaining them here nearby KLCC is definitely still considered ‘affordable’. As an example, the typical rental for an apartment in CBD area in Singapore for an expat starts from S$3,000 (RM7,800) for a 600sf apartment to S$5,000 (RM13,000) – S$8,000 (RM20,800) for a mid-range apartment. This goes up all the way to S$25,000 or higher for a 2,500sf off Orchard Road. Plus, there are also the super rich Malaysians too who may just want to own a unit there in case they got too drunk to drive after a long Happy Hour session.
written on 13 Aug 2014
Next suggested article: SP Setia, Bangsar, Luxury and Boutique offices

**In Article Advertisements Banner

0 Responses

  1. so what happens when a lot embassies moving to putrajaya? The expats who work for embassies also following move to putrajaya.
    Is that means the expat tenant pool is shrinking at KLCC area?

    1. Sorry. I think number of expats are increasing with more MNCs. Also embassies are not necessarily moving to Putrajaya. They can move to somewhere cheaper. That’s all.

      1. Somewhere cheaper definitely not KLCC area. So expat number will shrink in KLCC area. The only thing we need to know is percentage of expat working in embassy. Maybe not many I assume. Probably most of it is in Petronas Tower MNC office?

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Few seconds to subscribe for FREE and get property investment tips, latest financial and property news and more.

Join 2,882 other subscribers.
Motion arrow towards right
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Motion arrow towards right
Charles Tan The Founder The Writer Kopiandproperty
Charles Tan

Charles is Founder of kopiandproperty.com He writes from his investment experience for the the past 20 years in investments including property, stock, unit trust and more as well as readings and conversations with many property gurus in the industry. kopiandproperty.com is an independent property blog which is not affiliated to any media company, property developer or even real estate agencies.

Advertisements

Advertisement Banner

Facebook Comment

Table of Contents

Most Recent Posts

Discover more from kopiandproperty.com

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

join the family

Like us for daily investment news and more

Hit the like