Kathimerini English

Astir Palace plans revealed

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A Turkish-Arab fund plans to spend up to about 300 million euros to redevelop a luxury seaside resort on the southern coast of Athens, bringing significan­t foreign investment into the cash-strapped country, the fund said yesterday. Greece concluded in October the sale of a 90 percent stake in the Astir Palace hotel complex to the Jermyn Street Real Estate Fund as part of a key privatizat­ion scheme under Greece’s internatio­nal bailouts since 2010. The fund represents investors from Turkey, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and other Arab emirates. Greece’s leftist-led government initially froze the investment when it was first elected in 2015, while an administra- tive court ruled that planned constructi­on on an Athens riviera peninsula violated national law. That hurdle was removed when Jermyn Street and Greece agreed in January on an amended special zoning plan to align the plot’s developmen­t with the court’s ruling. Presenting their redevelopm­ent plan for the Astir Palace yesterday, Jermyn Street said it aimed to make the complex a prime destinatio­n for visitors from around the world. “The past three years have shown our commitment to both Greece and to the Astir peninsula and we continue to have this commitment stronger than ever,” said Walid Abu-Suud, co-chief executive officer of AGC Equity Partners, an investment adviser for Jermyn Street. “The redevelopm­ent plan aims to elevate the peninsula to a first-

 ??  ?? Price slowdown. The drop in prices of homes in Attica slowed anew in the third quarter of the year, as the decline was reduced to just 2.2 percent on a yearly basis, according to research by chartered surveyors Geoaxis. In the first quarter, prices had...
Price slowdown. The drop in prices of homes in Attica slowed anew in the third quarter of the year, as the decline was reduced to just 2.2 percent on a yearly basis, according to research by chartered surveyors Geoaxis. In the first quarter, prices had...

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