Thursday 30 September 2010

Montenegro to receive candidate status by the end of November

Buzek: Montenegro to receive candidate status by the end of November

During a conversation with President of the Montenegrin Parliament Ranko Krivokapic, President of the European Parliament Jerzy Buzek said that he expects the opinion of the European Commission on Montenegro to be positive and hopes that Montenegro would receive the EU candidate status by the end of November.

Krivokapic is staying in Belgium with members of the parliamentary Committee for Stabilisation and Accession of Montenegro and the European Parliament. Buzek said that the cooperation of the European Union and Montenegro has been strengthened and added that he welcomes the total Montenegrin progress in reforms.

Tuesday 28 September 2010

‎"Tremendously undeveloped " by the Financial Times

From the old pier in front of Saint Rok’s church, Donja Lastva appears sheltered from the 21st century. Venetian-style stone houses dot the jagged Bay of Kotor shoreline, with steep, forested mountainsides as a backdrop. But the Montenegrin fishing village of 730 people, just outside the summer holiday hub of Tivat, buzzes with imminent transformation, as nearby tourism developments promise to lift the whole bay out of the recession.
The village stretches for a quarter of an hour’s walk, ending abruptly at a concrete wall – the edge of the old Arsenal ship repair yard. The former Austro-Hungarian naval base, which closed after the 1990s Yugoslav break-up, has given way to Porto Montenegro, a luxury yacht marina whose first 85 berths opened last June.
Plans detail 650 berths, including 150 larger ones for super yachts. The moorings and their adjoining luxury residential community, with a first phase due for completion later this year, will soon outclass Monaco as the essential Mediterranean maritime stop, say Porto Montenegro’s owners.
“What we are witnessing here ... is going to transform the perception of Montenegro in the world,” says Peter Munk, the Canadian gold miner and majority owner of Adriatic Marinas, the main investor in the project. “But what is more important, it will transform the overall local economy.”
The development, also backed by British, French, Hungarian and Russian investors, partly aims to emulate the traditional architecture of Perast and Kotor, the renowned Venetian-era towns along the bay.
Fragments from the naval site are also to remain, including two Soviet-built submarines whose rusted conning towers poke above the Arsenal wall. Cal Lane, a Canadian metal sculptor who specializes in reworking industrial detritus, has started carving one of the vessels – a compact, 62ft attack sub – with a lace pattern.
Oliver Corlette, managing director for Adriatic Marinas, adds: “We will have one of the largest nautical museums in the Adriatic and historical artefacts will remain around the site as part of the landscaping.”
Positive spin-off effects will extend around the bay, Corlette says. Tivat, a relatively modern resort town with a small international airport, has spruced up its central shopping zone in recent months. Porto Montenegro’s example, meanwhile, could help villagers appreciate the value of their traditional stone architecture, he says.
Two more major tourism projects are also in the works. An Egyptian-owned company, Orascom Development, in October announced plans for a marina, hotel, golf course and residential villas covering 6.8m square metres at Lustica, directly across an inlet from Donja Lastva, without specifying the cost. Russia’s Metropol Group is building a €450m villa and bungalow complex on Sveti Marko, an island off Tivat. (Montenegro has adopted the euro, although it is not officially part of the eurozone.)
“I had clients coming to buy because of Porto Montenegro’s realisation,” says Leila Calic, director of Resido Montenegro, a French-owned estate agency. “And now the Orascom project will increase the value of the real estate market even further.”
Residents – particularly native-born Bokelji (bay people) – view the investments with a mix of wariness and optimism. “It will increase the cost of living around here but we hope the owners of those yachts will buy or rent our houses as their base for exploring this area,” says Miroslav Marusic, director of Donja Lastva’s Radio Duks and owner of Café Mar Mar.
Others are more suspicious of change. “Where Arsenal employed seven generations of skilled workers, Porto Montenegro will only produce waiters, maids and receptionists,” says Zoran Nikolic, a historian living in Tivat.
Non-governmental organisations have warned of environmental risks because the state is too lax about regulations. High-end projects such as Porto Montenegro, however, have their own interest in ecological sustainability, Munk says.
From an investment perspective, no one doubts that proximity to big tourism developments will raise prices in the area in the long run. “We love Munk’s marina,” says Justin Faiz, managing director of Pluto Capital, a UK-backed property development group. “First of all, they’re really doing it, both in terms of building the infrastructure and building a brand. But we also like it from our own business point of view.”
Medium-sized developers can take on more ambitious plans with a strong anchor project nearby. “Companies like us, who can build a good-quality product, can come in just below the marina’s minimum price level [of about €4,000 per sq metre] with houses and apartments less than a 15-minute drive from the marina,” Faiz says.
From out on the water, the coast looks “tremendously undeveloped, despite the best efforts of us and all the other developers for the last five years,” he adds. Pluto’s latest project is to refurbish an entire ruined village called Lucici, which was abandoned 30 years ago except for “someone keeping a few goats in one building”.
Unlicensed construction has not scarred the area as badly as Budva, the notoriously overbuilt beach town to the south. With the walled town of Kotor enjoying United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation World Heritage Site protection, the surrounding municipalities have seen the sense in preserving their old buildings, even if minor code violations are common.
Property prices took off in 2006, when Montenegro broke away from Serbia through a peaceful referendum. As returns on investment in Croatia peaked, some developers saw the neighbouring state as the next emerging destination. Russians with cash flocked to the tiny ex-Yugoslav country, preferring new-built apartments. Half-wrecked stone houses caught the imaginations of British and Irish buyers.
Prices in Donja Lastva reached €1,700 per sq metre for run-down buildings, and €2,600 per sq metre at the top end, says, Aleksandar Djurovic, sales representative for Savills Montenegro. Tivat town dwellings reached €4,000 at the peak.
Then, late in 2008, Russians became more cautious, while easy credit ran out for the British and Irish. Now, the typical price for old stone houses in the village would be €1,300 per sq metre or less but the rate of actual transactions is only one-tenth of what it was, Djurovic says. He is confident the market will regain its pre-crisis levels. “The question is whether this happens in two years, five years or 10 years,” he says.
The area has weathered difficult times before. Marusic recalls that during his childhood Donja Lastva thrived as a separate municipality with its own shops and cinema. Café Mar Mar occupies a former school building, first opened in 1898 for the 50th year of Emperor Franz Josef’s reign.
But disaster struck with Montenegro’s 1979 earthquake. While traditional stone structures often survived, little was left of their interiors. “After the 1979 earthquake, all of the bay area was dead,” Marusic recalls. “Really old settlements were totally ruined. But then people from around the former Yugoslavia started buying real estate here, until the war in the 1990s.”
Many fishermen sold their properties, often to Serbs from Belgrade, who wanted summer residences by the sea. But properties often became sub-divided, so that old stone houses now contain multiple cramped apartments of limited appeal.
Only when an investor buys all the fragments and reassembles them can such properties be restored to their former glory. Earth tremors since 1979 have been relatively minor and building codes now call for quake resistance equal to eight or more on the Richter scale, developers say.
Properties can be bought by bank transfer or cash, with the process taking no more than two weeks to complete, unless the buyer and seller have worked out a deal for payment in stages, Calic says. Although Montenegro has eliminated any legal obstacle to foreign ownership, he also recommends purchasers to hire a local lawyer.
New zoning rules have stimulated interest among developers for Donja Lastva’s empty fields, which lie on the inland side of the highway around the bay.
Demand could also rise for properties in Gornja Lastva (Upper Lastva), a tiny neighbouring mountaintop village that recently celebrated the 600th anniversary of its Saint Marija church. “Buyers don’t come asking about Gornja Lastva but those who discover it like it and want to find a property there,” Calic says.

Sveti Marko Island project - Europe's first 6 star island



Sveti Marko is an island of extraordinary natural beauty. Olive groves, sub-tropical vegetation and elegant cypress trees clothe the island with rich greenery and vibrant colours. Crystal clear waters bathe intimate bays and coves, overlooked only by towering and magnificent mountain ranges. Sveti Marko is an island to cherish, and nature of this beauty will not be compromised in the pursuit of 6-star luxury. The development density on the island will be ultra-low so to create a nature reserve with walks and trails for owners, hotel guests and island visitors. Cutting-edge sustainability and advanced recycling strategies are being used, and the only vehicles on Sveti Marko will be electric-powered. What has been gloriously unspoilt will be carefully preserved.
Master-plan was made according to the highest world standards. According to a unique concept the main idea of development will be to save nature of Island, which general area is 349 250 square meters. Approximate footprint coefficient is only 14 %. The general area which will be under construction is 79 790 square meters. The using of only environmentally safe technologies will give an opportunity to keep beaches which length is about 4 kilometers wild. For this purpose electricity will become a single source of energy for all transport on the Island.
In February 2010 the Government of Montenegro approved the State Location Study of the Sveti Marko Island project. The period of validity of the decision is up to 2020. The State Location Study is the General Plan. In such a way a process of preparation of approvals for Sveti Marko Island project is on the last stage.

Resort is managed by well know island operator Banyan Tree www.banyantree.com

Orascom Development to build resort in Montenegro

Swiss-based developer Orascom Development Holding will build a resort town on the Adriatic coast in Montenegro that will include hotels and an 18-hole golf course, the company said in a statement.
Orascom said the project would also include a marina, a town centre, commercial facilities and 2,350 residential units built over 6.8 million square metres on the Lustica peninsula in Tivat area. Orascom said it will hold a 90 per cent stake in the Lustica project, while the government of Montenegro will hold the rest.
The first phase would comprise building the main mooring area, hotel and town centre, and would be operational within five years. The town will be Orascom's third integrated development project in Europe, after the Andermatt development in Switzerland and the recently announced Cornwall project in the UK.
Earlier this month, Orascom said it was finishing a deal to build a coastal tourist village in Europe that would be similar to the company's flagship development El Gouna, a high-end resort on Egypt's Red Sea coast, but it did not specify where that project would be built.
With a land bank of approximately 127 million square meters, Orascom Development Holding (OHD) is a global town developer specializing in planning, building and operating integrated, self-sufficient leisure and residential towns around the world.
OHD is the operating corporate entity in Egypt. El Gouna, the company’s flagship town on the Red Sea coast, began as a simple real estate project. This development has since evolved into a fully independent town with a strong infrastructure, residential population, and established reputation.
OHD has expanded its operations internationally, broadening its development scope to cover seven countries across three continents. The company is now active in Egypt, Oman, Jordan, UAE, Switzerland, Mauritius, and Morocco, with plans to enter additional countries.
The company reported a net profit of roughly USD 42 million in the first half of 2009, up from USD 39 million in the same period a year earlier.

Qatari Diar invest into Montenegro resort

Qatari Diar has acquired the rights to hotel complex Blue Horizon for 24 million euros, media reports
Qatari Diar is fully owned by the Qatar Investment Authority and was founded to support Qatar’s rapidly expanding economy and to provide structure and quality control for the country’s real estate development priorities. Qatari Diar is building signature projects and facilitating vibrant, new communities on an unprecedented scale.  These range from our involvement with affordable housing schemes with joint-venture partner, Barwa, to the new Doha Convention Centre and Tower, a new landmark on the Doha skyline, the Ras Al-Haddeco-tourism resort in Oman and the giant Lusail project in Qatar.
BlueHorizon is in the Lustica Peninsula in the TIvat Municipality and is owned by  HTP Primorje. Earlier, EDESSA was retained by Qatari Diar and an international investment group to look at sites in Budva and Ulcinj in Montenegro for the development of various projects ranging from residential, commercial, retail, hotels and resorts.