Archive for the ‘General’ Category

IIA slams new building rules

February 11th, 2010

The Indian Institute of Architects have slammed the recent Government Order on amendments to the Kerala Municipal Building Rules, 1999, describing it as something that will sabotage the State’s development and adversely affect its economic development.

A recent statement from the institute said that it was with shock that the new notification was received by the community of architects.

Most of the revised rules were impractical and full of incongruities.

They were framed without consulting any of the stakeholders, such as architects, builders and the public.

One of the most striking feature of the Government Order was that about 80 per cent of the building permits could be issued only by the Chief Town Planner in Thiruvananthapuram, a return to the old regime, said Lalichan Zacharias, chairman of the Association, in the statement.

News Published Under:  The Hindu

Scepticism persists in the area of affordable housing

November 28th, 2009

If the global recession forced IT firms to cut down on their expenditure, renegotiate or cancel their deals, reduce employees’ intake and office space as well, it made real estate developers to come out with affordable housing for those in the bottom end of pyramid.

Soon affordable housing became the industry’s buzzword and houses in the price range of over Rs.40 lakh were described as affordable.

But investors started to quiz about those in the Rs.25-40 lakh brackets.

At a recent meeting on “South India real estate – the way ahead” organised by Confederation of Indian Industry, the end-users said that there was hardly any drop in the housing prices and sought the reason from the developers for selling land at abnormally high costs, even though it was procured at cheaper prices.

To this, the developers said that the land resources was limited and the prices were fixed based on the demand-supply factor.

Since there has been a mismatch, the prices were on the rise. But, the end-users were not convinced. As a next step, the developers urged the State government to allocate lands to them at low cost for development.

Vikram Kapur, Member Secretary, Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA), said that Government lands were not available for housing in Tamil Nadu, particularly in Chennai.

On the flip side, the CMDA planned to develop large parcels of land by partnering with farmers to avoid legal tussles.

The developed land would be given to public sector for development of housing on a large scale.

Kumar Gera, Chairman, Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Association of India (CREDAI), attributed the high land cost and taxes as key factors that impacted the development of affordable housing.

Extend boundary

R. Sellamuthu, Additional Chief Secretary and Housing Development Commissioner, Tamil Nadu, said that to avoid people migrating to city and to meet the ever-growing metropolitan needs, it was planned to extent the boundary of the Chennai Metropolitan Area to 1,500 sq.km from the present 1,182 sq.km.

After a decade or so, this boundary line would be extended to 2,000 sq.km.

The boundaries of other cities in the State will be expanded. Besides, total transport mobility will be in place in the next five to six years to offer better, cheaper, safer and quicker transportation.

Immediately, the topic changed to affordable office space. R. Siddarthan, Centre Head – Infrastructure, Tata Consultancy Services, mentioned that the company closed down their facility in Vadapalani and moved people to its premises on Rajiv Gandhi Salai.

It was unthinkable in other times as people would have simply refused to move. “It was a wrong way of long-term planning to meet the infrastructure needs. For the Q2 2010, our net addition to manpower was 1,692 or 1.21 per cent and office space was 76,140 sq.ft or 1.21 per cent. We haven’t thought about 2010 graduates,” he said.

To meet the space requirement, his suggestions were: reduce flexibility, but remain agile; change the way of long-term planning to meet infrastructure demands, look for more options; revisit or re-do the contracts; consolidate space requirements and improve efficiency.

Today building value and rentals are done based on current market conditions rather than the past transactions and there was a likelihood of being overvalued in a downturn. Developers will have to adjust to new market conditions, if they have to survive, the speakers said.

Ramesh Nair, Managing Director, Jones Lang Lasalle Meghraj, said that a study of Singapore market revealed that upward trend lasted for three-four years and downward trend for two to three years.

“Recession had impacted every single market in the world. The worst is over and recovery would start by mid-2010 and it will be stable during 2011 and 2012,” he said.
News Published Under:  The Hindu

Scepticism persists in the area of affordable housing

November 21st, 2009

If the global recession forced IT firms to cut down on their expenditure, renegotiate or cancel their deals, reduce employees’ intake and office space as well, it made real estate developers to come out with affordable housing for those in the bottom end of pyramid.

Soon affordable housing became the industry’s buzzword and houses in the price range of over Rs.40 lakh were described as affordable.

But investors started to quiz about those in the Rs.25-40 lakh brackets.

At a recent meeting on “South India real estate – the way ahead” organised by Confederation of Indian Industry, the end-users said that there was hardly any drop in the housing prices and sought the reason from the developers for selling land at abnormally high costs, even though it was procured at cheaper prices.

To this, the developers said that the land resources was limited and the prices were fixed based on the demand-supply factor.

Since there has been a mismatch, the prices were on the rise. But, the end-users were not convinced. As a next step, the developers urged the State government to allocate lands to them at low cost for development.

Vikram Kapur, Member Secretary, Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA), said that Government lands were not available for housing in Tamil Nadu, particularly in Chennai.

On the flip side, the CMDA planned to develop large parcels of land by partnering with farmers to avoid legal tussles.

The developed land would be given to public sector for development of housing on a large scale.

Kumar Gera, Chairman, Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Association of India (CREDAI), attributed the high land cost and taxes as key factors that impacted the development of affordable housing.

Extend boundary

R. Sellamuthu, Additional Chief Secretary and Housing Development Commissioner, Tamil Nadu, said that to avoid people migrating to city and to meet the ever-growing metropolitan needs, it was planned to extent the boundary of the Chennai Metropolitan Area to 1,500 sq.km from the present 1,182 sq.km.

After a decade or so, this boundary line would be extended to 2,000 sq.km.

The boundaries of other cities in the State will be expanded. Besides, total transport mobility will be in place in the next five to six years to offer better, cheaper, safer and quicker transportation.

Immediately, the topic changed to affordable office space. R. Siddarthan, Centre Head – Infrastructure, Tata Consultancy Services, mentioned that the company closed down their facility in Vadapalani and moved people to its premises on Rajiv Gandhi Salai.

It was unthinkable in other times as people would have simply refused to move. “It was a wrong way of long-term planning to meet the infrastructure needs. For the Q2 2010, our net addition to manpower was 1,692 or 1.21 per cent and office space was 76,140 sq.ft or 1.21 per cent. We haven’t thought about 2010 graduates,” he said.

To meet the space requirement, his suggestions were: reduce flexibility, but remain agile; change the way of long-term planning to meet infrastructure demands, look for more options; revisit or re-do the contracts; consolidate space requirements and improve efficiency.

Today building value and rentals are done based on current market conditions rather than the past transactions and there was a likelihood of being overvalued in a downturn. Developers will have to adjust to new market conditions, if they have to survive, the speakers said.

Ramesh Nair, Managing Director, Jones Lang Lasalle Meghraj, said that a study of Singapore market revealed that upward trend lasted for three-four years and downward trend for two to three years.

“Recession had impacted every single market in the world. The worst is over and recovery would start by mid-2010 and it will be stable during 2011 and 2012,” he said.

News Published Under:  The Hindu

What one-time settlement scheme holds for buyers

October 29th, 2009

Under-valuation of land has been rampant in State. Those who have done this can make use of the one-time settlement scheme. 
The exchequer has been losing vast sums for many years as amounts much lower than the money that changes hands are shown on record during property deals. Land buyers do this to make gains from a corresponding low outgo in stamp duty.

Registration Department officials say that apart from denying the State its rightful share of revenue, the illegal practice has been helping the sellers, who include even the land mafia, get away with low income taxes.

A one-time settlement scheme has been on since June in the State for those who have undervalued their property. Considering the response, the department has decided to extend the scheme till March 1, 2010 from the September 30 deadline.

The land buyer who opts for the scheme is exempted from legal proceedings in future. The exemption is applicable to land registrations till March 31, 2009. One has to pay a penalty of Rs.2,000 for up to five cents (1 cent = 40.5 sq m) of land in the Corporation limits, Rs.1,000 in municipalities and nothing in grama panchayat areas. For five-10 cents of land in the Corporation limits, the amount fixed is Rs.5,000; in municipalities, Rs.3,000 and in grama panchayat areas, Rs.1,000.

The fine for 10 cents to 50 cents in the Corporation limits is Rs.10,000, in municipalities, Rs.5,000 and grama panchayats, Rs.2,000. The defaulters have to pay a fine of Rs.12,000 or 6 per cent of the earlier stamp duty, whichever is higher, for lands above 50 cents in the Corporation limits; 4 per cent or Rs.7,000 in municipal limits and 2 per cent or Rs.3,000 in grama panchayat areas. The department has mobilised nearly Rs.18 crore from the scheme in the State. Kozhikode district’s share is Rs.1.8 crore, officials say. Sajan Kumar, Deputy Inspector-General of Registrations, says under-valuation of land rates has been prevalent throughout the State. The stamp duty in Corporation areas is 13.5 per cent; municipalities, 12.5 per cent; and in the grama panchayat limits, 10 per cent. Apart from this, a 2 per cent charge is levied for registration, says K.P. Suresh Kumar, District Registrar, Kozhikode.

Approximately 1.86-lakh under-valuation cases have been detected in the 33 sub-registrars’ offices in the district since 1986. The State has nearly 20 lakh cases.

The department has served notices on 25,000 people till now under Section 45(B) of the Kerala Stamp Act. There was a shortage of stamp paper for a month; so, the department is yet to despatch notices to the remaining defaulters. People can voluntarily submit the penalty even if they have not received any notice so as to avoid any liability in future, Mr. Sajan Kumar says.

He says that the sub-registrars determine the value of land in an area based on the guidelines fixed by the State government. They can report cases of undervaluation also on the basis of the market rates or a transaction registered at the actual value in a particular area. Normally, land transactions are done far below the actual market rates.

The sub-registrars’ offices will look at the highest transaction that took place in an area when dealers undervalue land. At present, the government tries to extract at least 30 per cent of the actual stamp duty, although in most cases it gets only 15 per cent. Builders of flats generally remit 50 per cent.

News Published Under:  The Hindu

Towards houses for all

October 23rd, 2009

Recognition of housing as a basic right of every family is the theme of a memorandum being submitted by the Kerala State Housing Board Employees’ Association to the Union government through the Indian National Trade Union Congress (INTUC).

Why cannot the government come forward to amend the Constitution to protect the right of the citizens to have a decent shelter was the fundamental question raised in the paper, submitted at the 29th plenary session of the INTUC in the city early this week.

With the government having introduced steps such as the National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme, the National Health Insurance Scheme and compulsory primary education for all children, it is expected that the issue of housing will be addressed with the seriousness it deserves, said the paper, submitted at the session by Vithura Sasi, working president of the association.

The government cannot shy away from its responsibility to provide affordable housing for all, especially the weaker sections of society, said E. Sankaran Potty, general secretary of the association, explaining the contents of the proposed memorandum. According to figures provided by the association, there will be a shortage of 24.71 million housing units in the country in the near future.

The paper quoted a study by the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India, which said that despite the current slump, demand for housing would become “stronger and more intense” with rising income, a swelling middle class and rapid urbanisation. At present, the housing shortage is 19.4 million units in the country, of which 6.7 per cent is in rural areas.

News Published Under:  The Hindu

To ensure the structural safety of buildings

September 30th, 2009

How safe is your building? Only a structural engineer can give an answer. For that, he or she should have been in the team that constructed the building, monitoring every stage of the work. But there is no rule that such a professional should be in the team. There are only guidelines. In western countries, structural certification is mandatory. Here, builders can decide whether to engage a structural engineer or not.

The government agencies seem to be not taking the initiative to tighten construction norms to ensure the safety of buildings. Usually, the buildings are designed on the Indian Standards Code, says S. Suresh, member of the Association of Structural and Geotechnical Consultants. A structural engineer need not issue a safety certificate during or after the construction.

A buyer may be under the impression that his building will stand for 100 years. An earthquake or cyclone may strike once in 50 years. Can the building which outwardly looks safe stand a wind velocity of 140 kmph or an earthquake high on the Richter scale? A structural engineer can ascertain safety only if stringent monitoring has been done at all stages of construction. Hence, he or she should be involved right from the planning stage, Mr. Suresh says. Sometimes, a structural engineer is called only at the start of the construction, as his or her role is considered only advisory.

Mr. Suresh contends that no structural engineer can certify such a building. Their work has two parts — the design and the execution. The structural drawing is important as the grid lines will be shown in that. It needs to be decided at the planning stage how many pillars are needed and where they should be erected.

Pending before the Supreme Court is a public interest litigation filed after the Gujarat earthquake on whether a structural engineer needs to certify a building.

Though structural safety is important with more and more multi-storey apartment complexes coming up to meet housing needs, the building rules in the country are yet to specify these norms. As Kochi has recently been denoted as an earthquake zone, the construction safety norms should be made stringent. An earthquake audit is likely to come up soon as part of the UNESCO programme to make buildings earthquake-resistant.
News Published Under:  The Hindu

Improve infrastructure on city roads: DDC

September 28th, 2009

KOCHI: The District Development Committee (DDC) has asked the State government to resolve the traffic problems of the city by recruiting more personnel to city traffic police and constructing more overbridges and flyovers.

K. Babu, MLA, moved a resolution to this effect at a meeting of the committee held at the collectorate conference hall on Saturday. M.J. Jacob, MLA, seconded the resolution. District Collector M. Beena presided.

MLAs, M.M. Monayee, and Dinesh Mani pointed out the various difficulties in the repair works and maintenance of roads in the district.

Dr. Beena said that efforts had been intensified for the construction of the approach road to the Kumbalanghi-Ezhupunna Bridge. Executive engineer, Public Works, said that maintenance works of Brahmapuram-Karimukgal Road would be undertaken shortly.Bills on works executed using the flood relief fund till June 30 had been cleared, Assistant Development Commissioner V.S. Soman said.

K.V. Beena, programme coordinator, National Rural Health Mission, said that tender procedures had been completed for the maintenance works of the taluk hospital at Muvattupuzha. Babu Paul, MLA, asked for more facilities at the hospitals in Pandappilly and Payipra.

Dr. Beena said that Rs. 13 lakh had been allotted for the community health centre at Malippuram. M.K. Purushothaman, MLA, asked about the progress of work on the health sub centre at Nayarambalam.

MLAs, Dinesh Mani and K. Babu asked to remove the shortcomings in the functioning of government hospitals at Chellanam and Palluruthy.

Mr. Monayee and Mr. Jacob wanted the maintenance works of the Muvattupuzha and Periyar Valley irrigation canals to be completed by November. Mr. Paul said that early completion of survey works in the irrigation project areas was vital for the eligible to be granted possession rights. Dr. Beena informed the meeting that approval had been received for the construction of village offices at Kalloorkkavu and Kaipattur.

T.U. Kuruvilla, MLA, brought to notice the construction of compound wall for the forest depot at Kothamangalam and the resultant traffic problems in the area.

News Published Under:  The Hindu

Capital gains under income head soon

September 28th, 2009

The draft Income Tax Code aims to simplify the income tax rules. The new norms will come into effect on April 1, 2011. Of the many things suggested, proposals relating to capital gains will have an impact on property investment and planning.

The receipts relating to ordinary sources, such as employment, house property, business and capital gains, will be classified under income.

The gains arising from the transfer of assets will be treated as capital gains that is to be added to the total income of the financial year in which the investment asset is transferred irrespective of the year in which the consideration is received.

If you sell a property in 2009 and register it in 2009 but the full and final payment happens in 2010, the year 2009 will be taken for tax purpose.

In case of compulsory acquisition, capital gains will be taxed in the year in which the compensation is actually received.

For immovable property, if the period of holding is less than three years, capital gains will fall under short-term and the gain made by transfer of the property is added to income from other sources and income tax has to be paid for the total amount.

In case of the property held for more than three years, capital gains is taxed at 20 per cent of the gain made. The tax will be exempted if the gain made is deposited in specified bonds (issued by the National Highways Authority of India or the Rural Electrification Corporation Ltd.) within six months from the date of transfer.

This is set to change. In the proposed code the distinction between short term and long term is removed. Gains made from the property, irrespective of the years of holding, will be added to the income of the year.

 News Published Under:  The Hindu

Needed: a national regulator for real estate

September 25th, 2009

Sunrise sectors generally follow a pattern of rise and fall leading to consolidation and structural changes.

Time has come for the real estate sector in India to transform from a largely unorganised sector into an organised one, with a national regulator in place.

From its heyday, spurred by credit flow following the opening up of the sector to foreign direct investment and listing of real estate companies in the stock market, there has been a substantial erosion of money from the sector in the recent past. Still, there exists a yawning gap between people’s buying power and unrealistic expectation of sellers. In these circumstances, affordable housing options in a city such as Kochi will depend heavily on how soon the sector gets regularised.

Every sector has undergone similar transformation. “For instance, with the opening up of the equity market, a regulator called SEBI [Securities and Exchange Board of India] came in. Likewise, real estate is in the process of a structural change because this is an investment asset class. This is something that people need,” says Suraj Nair, chief executive officer of Honey Bricks Property Management Private Ltd., which seeks to build an institution base for property intermediary services for the buyer and the seller. Problems crept in when seller expectations rose sky-high for various reasons. “But Kochi was not an isolated case because there was a wave of credit available across all asset classes around the world,” Mr. Nair says. “Equities and real estate in all economies outperformed everything else. When it declined, it did so the world over. In cities such as Mumbai and Bangalore, there was substantial erosion in property prices to the level of 45-50 per cent. Gold was outperforming all asset classes everywhere, including Kochi, where the erosion was only 10 to 12 per cent so far.”

After research for five months prior to its launch in July, Honey Bricks realised that in major tier-1 and -2 cities, over 70 per cent of real estate buying was for personal use or dwelling. About 25 per cent came in as investment. Kochi was, perhaps, the only city where it was primarily an investment option. “But there is something called affordability index. For instance, when a company’s health is evaluated, its market capital, balance sheet, a lot of financial ratios and economic indicators are taken into account. Similarly, there are a lot of financial indicators and economic ratios that define the value of property. Take the rental yield, for instance. Suppose someone buys an apartment for Rs.50 lakh in Kochi. The maximum rental yield that he would get could be in the range of Rs.8,000 to Rs.12,000 depending on the type of furnishing that has been done. In stray cases, the rent could be about Rs.15,000 to Rs.20,000 depending on the grandeur of the interior. If instead Rs.50 lakh is put in the least preferred of investments called fixed deposit, you are bound to get Rs.23,000 to Rs.24,000 after tax. Is real estate an investment option at this point when the least preferred investment option could yield a better return?” Mr. Nair asks.

“The seller has to be brought down from his level of expectation to a reasonable level of expectation. As for the buyer, there is still demand for real estate property, but the cream is gone. That raises the question of affordable housing,” he says.
News Published Under:  The Hindu