Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Sites of israel real estate properties

Dream israel property is a new site for the israeli real estate.






If you want to buy a property or sale a property in israel you can in the dream israel property site.

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Some of the feature in dream israel property:

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Apartments sold and rented

Second-hand apartments sold
Tel Aviv and central region
Givatayim: A 50-sq.m. two-room apartment on Jabotinsky St. was sold for NIS 575,000. A 115-sq.m. four-room apartment with parking on Mishmar Hayarden St. was sold for NIS 1.68 million. A 90-sq.m. three-room apartment with parking on Golomb St. was sold for NIS 1.05 million (Re/MAX).

Givat Shmuel: A 125-sq.m. four-room apartment on Motta Gur St. was sold for NIS 1.34 million. A 120-sq.m. four-room apartment on Harimon St. was sold for NIS 1.19 million. A 110-sq.m. four-room apartment on Ilan St. was sold for NIS 810,000 (Levy Yitzhak).

Rishon LeZion: A 65-sq.m. three-room apartment on Kaplinsky St. was sold for NIS 715,000 (AMG). A 107-sq.m. four-room apartment on Tnu'ot Hano'ar St. was sold for NIS 1.1 million. An 88-sq.m. three-room apartment on Nordau St. was sold for NIS 750,000. A 90-sq.m. three-room apartment on Harav Kook St. was sold for NIS 650,000 (Bank of Jerusalem).

Ness Ziona: A 130-sq.m. five-room duplex on Yosef Feldman St. was sold for NIS 1.53 million. A 127-sq.m. four-room apartment on Givati St. was sold for NIS 890,000. A 107-sq.m. three-room apartment on David Elazar St. was sold for NIS 900,000. A 105-sq.m. four-room apartment on Ha'Imahot St. was sold for NIS 980,000 (Anglo-Saxon).

Jerusalem and environs
Jerusalem: A 70-sq.m. three-room apartment on Handke St., Kiryat Hayovel, was sold for NIS 600,000. An 80-sq.m. three-room apartment on Moshe Dayan St., Pisgat Zeev, was sold for NIS 676,000. A 100-sq.m. four-room apartment in need of renovation on Mishmar Hagvul St., Ramat Eshkol, was sold for NIS 1.4 million. A 105-sq.m. four-room apartment on Yizhar St., Gilo, was sold for NIS 1.28 million (Anglo-Saxon).

Rentals
Tel Aviv and central region

Tel Aviv: A two-and-a-half-room apartment on Basel St., north Tel Aviv, was leased for NIS 2,600 a month. A four-room apartment on Rabbi Hanina St. was leased for NIS 7,600 a month. A three-and-a-half-room apartment on Lohemei Gallipoli St., Yad Eliahu, was leased for NIS 3,500 a month (Madas).

Ganei Tikva: A renovated four-room apartment on Harei Yehuda St. was leased for NIS 3,750 a month. A renovated three-and-a-half-room apartment on Harama St. was leased for NIS 3,200 a month.



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High-rises approved for Jerusalem

Buildings up to 24 floors may be built along Jaffa Street and along King George Street, except for Makor Baruch and the Mahane Yehuda market.


The Jerusalem Regional Planning and Building Commission will support the construction of high-rises in the city center under the new Local Outline Plan. The plan permits high-rises along Jaffa Street from the central bus station at the western entrance to the city to the intersection with King George Street, and along the latter as far as the Plaza Hotel. No high-rises will be permitted along the stretch of Jaffa Street in the 19th century Makor Baruch neighborhood and the Mahane Yehuda open market. Facades must reflect the city's historic structures in this area. High-rises will be limited to 24 floors
The plan also stipulates that high-rises along Jaffa Street around the Calatrava Bridge at the western city entrance will be only for office space, not for residences. In the area of Independence Park, high-rises will be limited to the height of the Plaza Hotel on the western edge of the park, in order to preserve the park's spaciousness.



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Danya Cebus loses 4 Moscow projects, wins 2 in Bucharest

The two new contracts for Africa-Israel construction arm are worth €45.5 million altogether.

Moscow, Russian Investment Group cancelled the planning contract with Danya Cebus subsidiary Danya Cebus Rus Ltd. for four projects in the Moscow area. Danya Cebus declined to state the size of the deal, but said that its exposure was immaterial.
In Bucharest, a Danya Cebus subsidiary will build to residential projects. The first project is the construction of six 11-storey buildings with 489 apartments for Adama Holding Ltd. (TASE:ADMA.B1) subsidiary Gila Investment srl for a total of €31.2 million. The project will be built in two stages, the first will take 22 months from the date of the work order and the second will take 24 months.

In the second project, Danya Cebus will build six six-storey buildings with 156 apartments for Confidential Business srl, a joint venture of Profit Construction Industries Ltd. (TASE: PROB) and New Horizon Group Ltd. (TASE:NERZ), for €14.25 million. Construction is due to take 20 months from the date of the work order.



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Still here, more choosy

Foreign investment in Israeli real estate is changing.

One of the more intriguing issues in recent years, as restrictions on capital flows between countries have been lifted, is the presence of foreign buyers in the Israeli real estate market. The strengthening of the shekel, impending recession, and the global credit crunch have undoubtedly left their mark on by foreign investors in real estate in Israel, but there are many answers to the question as to how much of an effect these factors have had. A special survey by "Globes" reveals new facts about the foreign buyers market, as it approaches one of its traditional peaks in the sweltering month of August.
Gean Henri Gugenheim, Jerusalem region and foreign residents manager at Bank Adanim - Mortgages and Loans Ltd. says that the era when foreigners bought real estate in Israel as if gold was being handed out free is over. "They're no longer buying anything that moves," he says. They may have been taken advantage of in the past but today they know that the prices are high and that you don't buy everything, though the ideological aspect is still there.

"The currency of foreign residents such as the French is still strong, and they can buy excellent properties. But they head for the outlying regions, and to Ramat Gan, Givatayim, Rehovot, and the Jerusalem suburbs. In Rehovot, for example, they've been told that the price is far lower, and the return is the same, that the city is expanding, and that there is the Weizmann Institute, and the agriculture faculty, and that it's 20 minutes from the beach. It's a pure investment," adds Gugenheim.

Some foreigners buy small buildings, or purchase land and then build a property which they then share with friends or family members. However, the rise in air fares has meant that buildings like these remain abandoned save for the summer season or during the holidays. According to Gugenheim, one fact that represents a marked change from the past is that foreigners are now spending more time checking out properties and alternatives for finance.

Waiting for prices to fall

The calmer atmosphere in France and the lowering of taxes and interest rates which Gugenheim describes as the "Sarkozy effect" has resulted in French buyers opting for small apartments as an investment instead of buying large properties to live in themselves. "In the past, 70% of purchases were for residential purposes and 30% for a quick profit or as rental properties, but today the distribution between the two is almost 50%-50%." In general, the banker does not sense a drop in demand, but rather "a more focused search, and an assurance that the property acquired can be rented out," says Gugenheim.

Dr. Rina Degani, co-CEO of marketing research company Geocartography Knowledge, says that some sites are still seeing sales, and others where they have come to near standstill. She says that in 2007, there were almost 5,000 deals on the market with foreign residents out of a total of 92,000 deals on the new and second hand property market together. "This amounts to 5.4% of the total number of deals, but the share in the new apartment market is much larger," says Degani. "In 2008 there will be fewer deals, and the foreigners will wait until the dollar is a bit more stable, or the market stabilizes, or prices fall. They haven't abandoned the country, but a 35% increase in apartment prices in real terms is not something they'll be overjoyed about, and they will wait for prices to come down."

In 2005, foreign residents invested $1.2 billion in real estate. This figure rose to $1.44 billion in 2006 and $1.55 billion in 2007. Foreign residents are perceived as buyers of luxury properties, but the figures presented by Degani reveal that this is inaccurate, since in 2007 the average apartment sold for $304,000, and only 55% of the apartments sold to foreign residents had a price higher than $300,000. "It is a myth that they only buy in high-rises in Tel Aviv. In 2006, foreign residents paid, on average, $370,000 for apartments in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, but in Ashdod and Netanya the average was even lower," says Degani.

Geographic region is also a key factor, with one third of English-speaking foreign residents showing a clear preference for Jerusalem. A further 20% buy in Netanya, 16% in the Tel Aviv region, and the rest in other parts of Israel. According to Geocartography data, the leading city among French speakers is Jerusalem.

Fall in luxury apartment prices

Mark Zeevi, CEO of real estate management software solutions company B.M.B.Y. Software Solutions Ltd., operator of the online real estate site Lagur, which caters for foreign residents, says, "From January to the beginning of June, the market came to a virtual standstill, but over the last month and a half we have almost returned to the situation we had at the end of 2007." Zeevi says, not surprisingly, that there has been a steep, 80% drop in interest in apartments in Israel from Americans, while interest from French buyers has fallen by 45%, 60% among UK buyers and 50% among buyers from everywhere else (mainly Italians, Spanish speakers, and Belgians).

"The low dollar made deals not worthwhile for foreigners, most of whose money is in dollars, to which one must add the global crisis and the expectation that prices in Israel will plummet as they have been doing in the US and in Europe. After six months, they saw that prices weren't falling and that the dollar had rallied slightly, so demand has picked up again," says Zeevi.

Data on the Lagur site show that the leading country in inquiries about buying property in Israel is France (45%), followed by Russia (30%), the US (15%), the UK, Italy, and Belgium. "I think that, within three or four months, the Russians will account for more than 50% of inquiries. We estimate that 5,000 apartments will be sold to Russians over the next two years," adds Zeevi. In other words, half of the total sales to foreigners at the current rate.

One person who does not share the feeling that it's "business as usual," is Adv. David Levi, manager of real estate sales site Michrazonline. "In recent months we've seen a fall in prices of luxury apartments as a result of the fall in the shekel-dollar exchange rate and shekel-euro exchange rate. Since foreign residents are an important player on the Israeli real estate market, especially in the luxury segment, there has been a clear slowdown in sales. This is being seen principally in fewer purchases by foreign residents and an increase in the range of luxury properties on offer," says Levi.



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Still here, more choosy

Foreign investment in Israeli real estate is changing.

One of the more intriguing issues in recent years, as restrictions on capital flows between countries have been lifted, is the presence of foreign buyers in the Israeli real estate market. The strengthening of the shekel, impending recession, and the global credit crunch have undoubtedly left their mark on by foreign investors in real estate in Israel, but there are many answers to the question as to how much of an effect these factors have had. A special survey by "Globes" reveals new facts about the foreign buyers market, as it approaches one of its traditional peaks in the sweltering month of August.
Gean Henri Gugenheim, Jerusalem region and foreign residents manager at Bank Adanim - Mortgages and Loans Ltd. says that the era when foreigners bought real estate in Israel as if gold was being handed out free is over. "They're no longer buying anything that moves," he says. They may have been taken advantage of in the past but today they know that the prices are high and that you don't buy everything, though the ideological aspect is still there.

"The currency of foreign residents such as the French is still strong, and they can buy excellent properties. But they head for the outlying regions, and to Ramat Gan, Givatayim, Rehovot, and the Jerusalem suburbs. In Rehovot, for example, they've been told that the price is far lower, and the return is the same, that the city is expanding, and that there is the Weizmann Institute, and the agriculture faculty, and that it's 20 minutes from the beach. It's a pure investment," adds Gugenheim.

Some foreigners buy small buildings, or purchase land and then build a property which they then share with friends or family members. However, the rise in air fares has meant that buildings like these remain abandoned save for the summer season or during the holidays. According to Gugenheim, one fact that represents a marked change from the past is that foreigners are now spending more time checking out properties and alternatives for finance.

Waiting for prices to fall

The calmer atmosphere in France and the lowering of taxes and interest rates which Gugenheim describes as the "Sarkozy effect" has resulted in French buyers opting for small apartments as an investment instead of buying large properties to live in themselves. "In the past, 70% of purchases were for residential purposes and 30% for a quick profit or as rental properties, but today the distribution between the two is almost 50%-50%." In general, the banker does not sense a drop in demand, but rather "a more focused search, and an assurance that the property acquired can be rented out," says Gugenheim.

Dr. Rina Degani, co-CEO of marketing research company Geocartography Knowledge, says that some sites are still seeing sales, and others where they have come to near standstill. She says that in 2007, there were almost 5,000 deals on the market with foreign residents out of a total of 92,000 deals on the new and second hand property market together. "This amounts to 5.4% of the total number of deals, but the share in the new apartment market is much larger," says Degani. "In 2008 there will be fewer deals, and the foreigners will wait until the dollar is a bit more stable, or the market stabilizes, or prices fall. They haven't abandoned the country, but a 35% increase in apartment prices in real terms is not something they'll be overjoyed about, and they will wait for prices to come down."

In 2005, foreign residents invested $1.2 billion in real estate. This figure rose to $1.44 billion in 2006 and $1.55 billion in 2007. Foreign residents are perceived as buyers of luxury properties, but the figures presented by Degani reveal that this is inaccurate, since in 2007 the average apartment sold for $304,000, and only 55% of the apartments sold to foreign residents had a price higher than $300,000. "It is a myth that they only buy in high-rises in Tel Aviv. In 2006, foreign residents paid, on average, $370,000 for apartments in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, but in Ashdod and Netanya the average was even lower," says Degani.

Geographic region is also a key factor, with one third of English-speaking foreign residents showing a clear preference for Jerusalem. A further 20% buy in Netanya, 16% in the Tel Aviv region, and the rest in other parts of Israel. According to Geocartography data, the leading city among French speakers is Jerusalem.

Fall in luxury apartment prices

Mark Zeevi, CEO of real estate management software solutions company B.M.B.Y. Software Solutions Ltd., operator of the online real estate site Lagur, which caters for foreign residents, says, "From January to the beginning of June, the market came to a virtual standstill, but over the last month and a half we have almost returned to the situation we had at the end of 2007." Zeevi says, not surprisingly, that there has been a steep, 80% drop in interest in apartments in Israel from Americans, while interest from French buyers has fallen by 45%, 60% among UK buyers and 50% among buyers from everywhere else (mainly Italians, Spanish speakers, and Belgians).

"The low dollar made deals not worthwhile for foreigners, most of whose money is in dollars, to which one must add the global crisis and the expectation that prices in Israel will plummet as they have been doing in the US and in Europe. After six months, they saw that prices weren't falling and that the dollar had rallied slightly, so demand has picked up again," says Zeevi.

Data on the Lagur site show that the leading country in inquiries about buying property in Israel is France (45%), followed by Russia (30%), the US (15%), the UK, Italy, and Belgium. "I think that, within three or four months, the Russians will account for more than 50% of inquiries. We estimate that 5,000 apartments will be sold to Russians over the next two years," adds Zeevi. In other words, half of the total sales to foreigners at the current rate.

One person who does not share the feeling that it's "business as usual," is Adv. David Levi, manager of real estate sales site Michrazonline. "In recent months we've seen a fall in prices of luxury apartments as a result of the fall in the shekel-dollar exchange rate and shekel-euro exchange rate. Since foreign residents are an important player on the Israeli real estate market, especially in the luxury segment, there has been a clear slowdown in sales. This is being seen principally in fewer purchases by foreign residents and an increase in the range of luxury properties on offer," says Levi.



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Jerusalem building on preservation list demolished

A historic building on Harav Kook Street in downtown Jerusalem was demolished, even though it has been on the city's preservation list since 1968. The demolishing is a severe blow to the city's unique urban fabric. The building, built in the 1920s served as the Herzberg Orphanage and later as the residence of the Lemel School after it was moved from the Old City, and finally as the Ankori School for matriculation studies.
The building is close to the Rav Kook Center, Beit Ticho, and Hadassah College, all of which are historic buildings along Harav Kook Street and Hanevi'im Street in the historic downtown area.
The building was sold to a private developer by the Jerusalem municipality. The project for the lot called for a residential building with at least eight floors.

The Council for the Preservation of Historic Sites said in response, "We're shocked by the decision to demolish this building, and we're astonished that a building that had been on the preservation list for 40 years suddenly had its Urban Building Plan changed without our knowledge or the knowledge of the public."



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Treasury allocates funds to train Israeli construction workers

The Ministry of Finance has agreed to allocate NIS 30 million to the Association of Contractors and Builders in Israel(ACBI) and the National Union of Building Workers to train Israeli construction workers and hold training seminars and courses. The government also allocated an additional NIS 10 million.
The allocations came after a long battle waged by the ACBI and the National Union of Building Workers against the Ministry of Finance, which reached the High Court of Justice at one point. The ACBI petitioned the court against the Minister of Industry, Trade and Labor who sought to abolish the vacation fund for construction workers and transfer its accumulated proceeds to the employees' pension and insurance fund.


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Azrieli - Africa-Israel malls sale talks collapse

The sides are far apart on several fronts, but talks may resume in the future.

The parties disagree on a number of tax issues and other points relating to the structure of the deal. The negotiations have been called off, but may resume later.
Sources inform ''Globes'' that Azrieli Group was due to purchase Africa-Israel's stake in the Ramat Aviv Mall at a value of NIS 1.9 billion, reflecting a return on investment of 5.5%. This would be a record price of a mall, far above the assessment made for it. The price tag for the Savionim Mall was NIS 200 million.

"Globes" was the first to report about the talks between Africa-Israel and Azrieli Group over the sale of the malls. On July 10, Africa-Israel confirmed the report in a notice to the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE). It said that it had reached an memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Azrieli Group, and that it expected to obtain a total of NIS 1.8 billion for its holdings in the malls that were part of the deal.


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Olympia to build in Kiev

Petah Tikva-based Olympia Real Estate Group said Wednesday its European branch, Olympia Euro, has been awarded the contract for construction of a huge building project in the Ukrainian city of Kiev.

The project will include 2,000 residential units, a 180,000 square-meter commercial center and a 700,000 square-meter hotel. Olympia estimated construction costs will be in the range of NIS 3.4 billion, while the project is expected to generate NIS 8b. in sales for the company.



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Legal Ground: Little country, big on property

In tiny Israel, everything seems to be writ large. We have one of the highest numbers of symphony orchestras per capita, the greatest number of hi-tech start-ups in absolute terms and an effervescent property market.


HEFTSIBA PURCHASERS ignored the protection given to them by law, succumbing to the salesman's lures by diving into the pool without checking the water.
Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski
In Israel's 21,000 square kilometers, between 100,000 and 120,000 homes change hands yearly. Most of the apartments that are bought are second-hand sales and about one-third are in newly constructed buildings.

Israeli building companies invest approximately NIS 36 billion in construction, two-thirds of which is in the residential market. In fact, the construction industry contributes over 12% of the gross national product and employs several hundred thousand workers. To grasp how big an industry it is (in Israeli terms) one needs merely to look at the number of professional and semi-professionals directly involved: between 5,000 and 8,000 real estate agents; approximately 8,000 architects and about 9,000 registered building contractors. (The subject of registered contractors and why it is important to work only with contractors registered with the Registrar of Building Contractors will be the dealt with in a future column.)

It is not really surprising that the residential property market is so active. Quite apart from the large influx of foreign buyers, steadily growing from year to year, Israelis themselves are very active in the market. For Israelis love to be home owners; 72% own their homes, one of the highest homeowner rates in the world. Just take a look at other major countries to make a comparison: the home ownership rate in the US is 68%, in Britain 69% and in France 54%.


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Trouble in the Jewish Quarter

The Old City's rebuilt Jewish Quarter stands as one of Zionism's proudest accomplishments - a showpiece of history and spirituality that attracts millions of Israelis and foreign visitors annually to the Western Wall and the neighborhood's myriad tourist attractions.


The Hurva Synagogue refurbishment will restore it to its former glory - at too high a cost, say locals.
Photo: Israel Marc Sellem [file]
But the 600 families living in the picturesque quarter have a different perspective on life there. Many are fed up with the arbitrary quasi-bylaws imposed upon them by the Jewish Quarter Development Company (JQDC) - the government corporation established after the Six Day War to restore the then-ruined, historic neighborhood.

In particular, residents are irate about the inadequate parking arrangements imposed upon them by the JQDC. Two outdoor parking lots serve the area - one of 170 spaces reserved for residents and a 70-car visitors lot. Residents pay a nominal NIS 150 annual parking fee.

"The two lots were supposed to be for the residents only but from their great chutzpah the Hevra [JQDC] operates one for visitors to make money," charges Shmuel Yitzhaki, a member of the residents committee who has been living in the Jewish Quarter since 1979.

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Ra'anana will continue to expand

Ra'anana has presented its long-awaited "Vision for the year 2020," which plans to create an extra 4,000 apartments in the north and west of the city, reports local.co.il. But critics have been quick to attack the plan, which took two years to put together, cost NIS 176,000 and involved some 1,600 people.

According to the report, mayor Nahum Hofree presented the "vision" after it received council approval, saying the plan's main consideration was the pressing need for more housing in the city. The mayor said that 600 residential apartments would begin being built in 2009 on land currently occupied by Kfar Batya in the west of the city, and that the orchard recently planted on this land by the leaseholders would not stop the building project from going ahead. In addition, a further 3,500 residential units will be built in the north of the city, starting in the year 2010. As well as promising to find "housing solutions" for residents, the "vision" promises to upgrade road infrastructure and preserve a "clean and healthy" environment in the city.

Hofree said some 1,600 people, including hundreds of residents, had been involved in preparing the "vision" - the greatest number of people ever involved in any municipal plan in Israel. Most of the NIS 176,000 it cost went on the salaries of advisers. Hofree said the "vision" would act as "a compass that will lead us to the years ahead," adding that his aim was to preserve Ra'anana's character as a town and not change it to a city full of residential apartment towers.

Opposition councilors said the preparation of the plan had "lost all proportion." They said it had cost too much, had taken too long to prepare, involved too many people, and the end result was shallow and smacked of electioneering. Opposition councilor Leah Halperin said that previous mayor Ze'ev Bielski could have come up with the same plan "in half a day over dinner."