Dubai's Emaar pauses tallest luxury tower work
Real Estate
By
Reuters
| Apr 02, 2020
Developer Emaar Properties said it had suspended construction of a residential tower in a prime Dubai location near the world’s tallest building, showing how the coronavirus is deepening the emirate’s real estate downturn.
Dubai, a regional tourism, trade and business hub, has faced a real estate slowdown for most of the past decade as the global financial crisis and weak oil prices burst a price bubble and left the market oversupplied with homes and offices.
The coronavirus outbreak, which has sent oil prices plunging further, has cast a further shadow on real estate prospects.
“In light of the current situation, delays in operations outside of our control have impacted construction on the project,” an Emaar spokesman said about the suspension of work on the luxury 77-storey Il Primo tower.
He said there would be a “temporary pause” in construction of the tower next to the world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa, which Emaar built. He did not say when work was expected to resume.
READ MORE
State: Gulf firms to keep fuel flowing into Kenya despite Middle East crisis
Hustler Fund unpaid loans hit Sh12.5b as MPs demand names of defaulters
Mini-budget tests IMF austerity demands as State spending soars
GCR affirms Afreximbank ratings, removes rating watch on reduced sovereign risk
KQ picks NSE boss Kiprono Kittony, David Ndii in Board shake-up
Tea market nets Sh1.5 billion for the smallholder factories in a week
MultiChoice shuts down Showmax after 11 years
Calm before storm: Why oil prices may rise in May
Private sector activity registers sluggish growth in February
Construction firms
The Il Primo tower is designed to have luxury apartments with four, five and six bedrooms, with prices starting at 19,413,888 dirham (Sh530 million, $5.3 million), Emaar’s website said.
Turkey’s TAV is among the construction companies involved.
Emaar has been selling a range of businesses to focus on property, retail and hospitality.
The developer has been in talks to sell its district cooling business to Dubai’s National Central Cooling Co (Tabreed).