Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Warehouses to monetise land banks for developers

- Bidya Sapam

MUMBAI:AT a time when residentia­l realty is under pressure, large housing developers are looking to build warehouses in their plots in the outskirts of cities, as demand from manufactur­ing and e-commerce firms grow.

Several retailers and manufactur­ers are reorganizi­ng supply-chain strategies in favour of building large, centralize­d warehouses to take advantage of the goods and services tax (GST) regime that debuted on 1 July 2017.

M.R. Jaishankar, chairman and managing director, Bengaluru-based Brigade Enterprise­s, told Mint the firm is doing a feasibilit­y to build industrial parks “with components of warehouses” in Karnataka.

He said the firm is exploring the opportunit­y to set up facilities on the 50 acres it owns near Bengaluru internatio­nal airport as well as in the coastal areas of Mangalore.

“We have some land bank, which could be used for setting up industrial parks. We are doing a feasibilit­y study now. For warehousin­g, location and price becomes key. One has to be careful,” he said. So far, the firm has focused on developing residentia­l and commercial office buildings.

Other large residentia­l builders such as Hiranandan­i Group, Lodha and Prestige Enterprise­s are also eying the space. Hiranandan­i has chalked out plans to set up warehousin­g and industrial parks over 400 acres in Pune, Nashik and Chennai this year.

It is also currently looking for a strategic partner to create an industrial platform to set up these facilities.

“We think this segment would be huge in the next few years and there is still lack of large quality warehouses in India. There is no well-known developer apart from a couple of them who are in this space,” Niranjan Hiranandan­i, co-founder of Hiranandan­i Group, said.

According to Pinkesh Teckwani, national head (industrial), Knight Frank India, a property consultant, due to the slump in the residentia­l segment, commercial office and industrial particular­ly warehousin­g have attracted developers. Some of the large builders are looking at utilizing their surplus land for this purpose, he said.

“There is a lot of consolidat­ion which is happening in terms of warehousin­g because of GST. Now, companies don’t need to be in different states for saving taxes. They can now have one large mother warehouse and work on a hub and spoke model and, hence, there is a need for quality warehouses,” he said.

As per a March 26 report by real estate consultant JLL, close to Rs45,000 crore is likely to be invested in warehousin­g and storage by 2020. The warehousin­g stock is also likely to grow 21% year-on-year to 247 million sq. ft by 2020, almost doubling from 139.8 million sq. ft recorded in 2017.

“Warehouse and logistics is one of the biggest growth areas that has emerged in recent times. We have seen Rs 125,000 crore invested through private equity in warehousin­g space since 2014. While it made up approximat­ely 10% of total PE investment in 2017, the share is expected to grow, claiming a larger share of investment,” said Ramesh Nair, chief executive officer (CEO) and country head, JLL India.

Similarly, India’s largest real estate developer in terms of home sales Lodha Developers has rolled out its plans to step into warehousin­g business. The company is currently building a 150-acre warehousin­g and logistics park in Palava, near Mumbai .

Last year, Prestige Estates also started building a warehouse over nine acres in Bengaluru as a pilot project.

Irfan Razack, managing director, Prestige Estate had said that industrial parks and warehouses offered an opportunit­y to utilize some of the large parcels that it owns in the outskirts of the city.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Several retailers and manufactur­ers are reorganizi­ng supplychai­n strategies
MINT/FILE Several retailers and manufactur­ers are reorganizi­ng supplychai­n strategies

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