Navi Mumbai International Airport Cleared For Take-Off..!
With
the final approval for Navi Mumbai’s airport now in place, real estate
inventory overhang in areas around it will ease in the short term. Over the
long term, there will be a marked recovery in prices in these areas.
by Mr. Ramesh Nair, COO – Business
& International Director, JLL India
Navi Mumbai’s proposed international
airport has finally got the last pending approval – CIDCO has handed over 250
hectares of land in lieu of 108 acres of mangroves that will be taken over for
the project. Narendra Modi’s new governance programme Pragati (Proactive
Governance and Timely Implementation) is clearly at work here. In the latest
development, the environment ministry made a key exemption, waiving an earlier
requirement that a mangrove sanctuary be created by the airport’s developers.
Now the developers will only have to make the designated mangrove area
adjoining the airport ‘unattractive’ to birds.
With the last approval in place,
work can finally start on the project. A toast of the Navi Mumbai’s developer community,
the announcement of the Navi Mumbai International Airport in 2007 had been the
basis for massive price rises in hitherto anonymous locations like Ulwe,
Kamothe, Kharghar, etc.
After the initial euphoria died
down, controversies marred the start of this project and the year-on-year
appreciation of prices also fell - especially in the last couple of years.
Given the morass of land acquisition issues, home buyers and investors were
simply not sure when, and even if the airport project will actually become a
reality.
In fact, prices in Ulwe
fell by 10-20% when it became clear that the airport was stuck on the
bureaucratic runway (though this trend is already changing - prices in
the adjoining areas have increased by 5-10% in 1H 2015.)
Precinct
|
Capital Value Change
(%)
|
Capital Value Change
(%)
|
|
1Q 2007 – 1Q 2012
|
1Q 2012 – 1Q 2015
|
Panvel
|
74%
|
9%
|
Kharghar
|
87%
|
32%
|
Source: JLL Research
Immediately after commencement of
the airport’s construction, the currently static real estate markets around it
will see a marked pick-up in sales. Inventory overhang will start to clear off
and investors will start selling to unlocking their blocked capital. In the mid-to-long
term, there will definitely be price rise in these areas, especially after the
pent-up inventory is sold off.
· Will the clearance of the ‘airport
hurdle’ significantly revitalize Navi Mumbai’s development growth curve?
· Will Navi Mumbai be able to develop
its infrastructure further and turn into an independent city like Pune?
· Will it be able to compete with
Bangalore after the successful completion of this airport, leveraging its
location of being situated between two older and bigger neighbours – Pune and
Mumbai?
The answer to all three questions
can definitely be a ‘yes’, given the strategic location of this city. Navi
Mumbai is located quite close to Pune, and is also closely connected to Mumbai
by rail and road. Projects like the 22-km long Mumbai trans-harbor link, which
will enhance its connectivity to Mumbai, have been given priority by the
current government and would come up by the time the airport is ready.
Unlike Mumbai, which is surrounded
by sea on three sides, Navi Mumbai can grow in the directions of Pune as well
as Uran and beyond. Additionally, it has a fully-functional port at Nhava
Sheva. With this airport, the satellite city’s infrastructure will get a major
boost. Already, the Maharashtra government is planning for growth nodes around
the airport and has also announced the smart city NAINA (Navi Mumbai Airport
Influence Notified Area).
Navi Mumbai’s fairly balanced
industrial growth will continue, and more and more of Mumbai’s population will
eventually shift to the city and the other smart cities that will come up
around the airport. In short, the final clearance for Navi Mumbai’s
long-awaited International Airport heralds a massive boom for the region.
Quick Facts:
· The government had initially approved setting up the
airport in 2007
· Initially scheduled for completion in 2015, it is now
likely to be ready only by December 2018
· The project will cost roughly Rs 14,573 crore and is
likely to be completed in four phases.
· The airport will span an area of 2,867 acres with a
terminal building of 5,23,000 square meters and two runways.
|
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