The Borneo Post

Building boom lifts Lisbon allure – and property prices

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LISBON: Lisbon’s azure skies are dotted with forests of cranes as scores of constructi­on workers give Portugal’s capital a shiny and new, if pricey, veneer.

For years the local constructi­on industry lay in the doldrums – but today the city is a hive of activity, a boon for those involved in its overhaul.

“Eight years ago, with my colleague, we were going from door to door offering our services,” recalls Roman Kurtysh, a stonemason from Ukraine who specialise­s in facade revamps and working at height.

“I still don’t know how we survived,” grins Kurtysh, a stocky man in his 40s with a thinning beard who left his homeland for Portugal almost two decades ago.

He tried his hand at various jobs before setting up Rkesa, an urban renewal firm, with compatriot Oleksandr Shulyak in 2009. “In those days, at the end of the month we would draw a salary of 53 euros ( RM239) each,” recalls Kurtysh. “We were ready to throw in the towel,” he told AFP.

Early 2014 brought a turning point. Three years after receiving an EU bailout loan package of 78 billion euros Portugal began to drag itself out of a deep-seated economic crisis. The two Ukrainians took full advantage. “From that point on, our order books began filling up ,” recalls Oleksandr Shulyak, whole ads the firm’ s team of“steel monkeys” — high rise workers who scale 16 Rkesa sites in the capital alone.

Rkesa is just one example of the surge in constructi­on activity with planning permission­s and projects soaring after years of urban decline. By mid-2017, the sector employed 310,000 people, eight per cent more than the 287,000 of one year earlier, according to Portugal’s National Statistica­l Institute (INE).

Sector production rose 5.9 per cent in 2017, in contrast with a 52 per cent slump in the 19 years that went before, estimates the Portuguese constructi­on industry federation FEPICOP.

“In the past five years, restoratio­n has been a key driver, accounting for more than 80 per cent” of constructi­on activity, notes Jose Velez of real estate consultant­s Prime Yield.

Before 2013, in Lisbon “one building in three was empty, decrepit or in an advanced state of disrepair,” says Luis Mendes, a researcher at the University of Lisbon’s Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning.

That is no longer the case, with many of Lisbon’s typical flaking and weatherbea­ten ochre facades masked by swathes of scaffoldin­g behind which brand new buildings are emerging.

A batch of regulatory measures has enabled the building revamp to move on apace, says Mendes, singling out the lifting of a decades-long freeze on rents as well as the introducti­on of “golden visas” for non-EU nationals to take up residency if they spent at least 500,000 euros on property.

Another measure has been the recent introducti­on of a preferenti­al tax regime for “non-habitual residents” regularly spending time in Portugal or owning real estate there.

Beyond that, the government has introduced a raft of fiscal measures including a five-year exemption from local taxes for purchasers of an old building earmarked for renovation as well as a reduced value added tax rate of six per cent.

“Today, the country is less dependent on these programmes. It has gained repute and Lisbon is trendy,” says Luis Lima, president of Portugal’s associatio­n of real estate profession­als and agents APEMIP.

Furthermor­e, “the (constructi­on) sector is benefiting from a highly favourable backdrop,” explains Rui Campos, head of the Associatio­n of Civil Constructi­on Industries and Public Works (AICCOPN).

Other positive factors are last year’s record 20 million tourists, coupled with economic growth of 2.7 per cent and low interest rates. “There remains much to do in the renovation market,” says Campos. “We are talking around one million homes requiring repairs in Portugal... for a market valued at an estimated 24 billion euros.”

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