The National - News

CITYSCAPE IS A VISION OF SNOWFLAKES IN SUMMER … AND SUITS

▶ The capital’s property showcase has something for everyone

- JAMES LANGTON Business, pages 18 and 19

At Cityscape Abu Dhabi 2018, everyone is your friend – the men in too-tight suits and hair styled as slickly as their sales patter; the young women with painful shoes and an overabunda­nce of foundation. There are a lot of them and they all want to catch your eye.

“Hi there sir. Can I interest you in tax-free land in the United Kingdom? And might I say you are looking particular­ly dapper today?”

There is something for everyone at Cityscape, especially if you are looking for a floating Venice-themed hotel with underwater rooms.

Kleindiens­t is promising this latest wonder of Dubai by 2022, along with another developmen­t whose design is based on upside-down Viking longships, and a Swiss-themed resort that will have real snow even in the heat of a Gulf summer.

“German technology,” one of the sales team explains.

The Kleindiens­t projects are all based on The World Islands, the famous, some might say infamous, offshore developmen­t that was one of the casualties of the property crash of late 2008, part of the global economic turndown.

That was the era of the rotating skyscraper and the residentia­l tower designed like an iPod. Ten years later, the idea of snow that doesn’t melt at 48°C might provoke flashbacks in more nervous investors.

But no, says the salesman: “These are crazy ideas. But they are going to happen.”

The first villa is already ready to show to prospectiv­e buyers. Venice will float in 2022.

“Your trusted realtor” is the tag line of one company, as if there could be any other. Cityscape 2018 is a quieter, more measured event than the craziness of 2008, when investors queued for hours to slap down their hard-earned savings for a deposit on an off-plan property with an ambiguous completion date but a promise of huge returns.

Back then, stories were told of those at the front of the queue heading straight to those at the back, selling on, with a solid mark-up, an investment they had owned for barely a few minutes. For many, it did not end well.

Reforms in the property market have made the UAE a safer place for investors and Cityscape 2018 is a calmer event that fills only part of the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre. Bijou, as the estate agents like to call it. The longest queue is for Costa Coffee.

Still, the big players are all here. Aldar is launching the next phase of Alghadeer, on the border of Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Over the next 15 years it will add more than 14,000 homes to the 2,000 already built, with the emphasis on affordabil­ity.

The model of the project is set under dozens of suspended inverted glass eggs that rise and fall to music, like a benevolent alien space invasion. Models, of course, are one of the things that make any Cityscape, sparkling with tiny lights that reflect off the plastic lakes and lagoons, a perfect vision of the future. They see potential in unexpected places, say a rainwater collection lake in Bani Yas with its own beach.

The grandest model of all hides behind a black curtain, admission only with a VIP ticket – given to anyone who asks. This is starchitec­t Thomas Heatherwic­k’s vision of a boutique hotel for downtown Abu Dhabi.

Even scaled down it is a vast structure composed of blocks on stilts, the putative guests rendered in plastic as tiny black silhouette­s. The Ras Al Akhdar project is the vision of the Abu Dhabi developer Imkan, whose philosophy is: “We’re here to create soulful places that enrich people’s lives.”

The young man designated to show guests the project seems less certain. Location? Opening date? Number of rooms. “I can’t really tell you anything about it.”

The Imkan stand is also showcasing a design for a revolution­ary mosque with a prayer hall entirely of glass with “the prayers’ row as the generative unit of the mosque” according to the promotiona­l video.

“It’s the design of an Egyptian architect in his 90s for Cairo,” a saleswoman says. “I think.”

Cityscape Abu Dhabi 2018 ranges from high-end villas to modest studio apartments in the UAE and beyond. A greenfield site on the outskirts of Liverpool not to your taste? How about a villa on Spain’s Costa del Sol?

“Hi there, sir. Might I say you are looking particular­ly dapper today?”

Hi there sir. Can I interest you in tax-free land in the UK? And might I say you are looking particular­ly dapper today? SALESMAN AT CITYSCAPE

 ?? Victor Besa / The National ?? Sheikh Hamed bin Zayed visits Aldar’s model for Alghadeer, under glass balloons that rise and fall to music
Victor Besa / The National Sheikh Hamed bin Zayed visits Aldar’s model for Alghadeer, under glass balloons that rise and fall to music

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