The National - News

SWEDEN’S ISLAND AIMS TO BE A WORLD FIRST

▶ Dubai’s artificial archipelag­o modelled on a map of the Earth is beginning to take shape, Patrick Ryan reports

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We didn’t have coral reefs so we had to build them. Having coral reefs is not difficult, what is difficult is having real corals JOSEF KLEINDIENS­T Chairman, Kleindiens­t Group

An “impossible dream” more than a decade in the making has become a reality, as the first country in The Heart of Europe at The World island developmen­t in Dubai prepares to open a permanent residence.

The first residents will set up home before the end of the year at the Dh100 million Sweden Beach Palace on Sweden Island, part of the six-island cluster that makes up The Heart of Europe.

It is all part of an ambitious attempt to bring Maldives-style living to Dubai.

More than 1,500 workers, the majority of whom live on the islands, are already working on the project, with that number set to swell to 2,000.

Each of the 10 Swedish beach palaces – one of which is super-sized to make for an even more exclusive address – will also have its own private section of beach and a fully owned piece of the marine area plot, including a private coral reef.

Moored close to the same island are the famous “floating seahorse” villas.

The World, an archipelag­o series of 300 islands modelled on the global map, was conceived in 2003, only for constructi­on to be halted in 2008 because of the global financial crisis. Many thought that would be the end of The World, but now a brighter future is ready to be mapped out.

Josef Kleindiens­t, chairman of the Kleindiens­t Group that is developing the project, announced that 10 of the palaces have already been sold – eight to Middle East billionair­es and the other two to billionair­es from Europe.

Mr Kleindiens­t is adamant that the project is on course to be fully completed by 2020.

“People told me it could not be built and it would be impossible, but it’s not impossible,” he said.

The luxury project will appeal to people looking to own a second home, Mr Kleindiens­t said.

“The properties have been designed as second homes – Dubai’s first luxury area for UAE residents to own a holiday property in their own country, instead of jetting to the Maldives, Mauritius or the Seychelles.

“The second-home market is a new concept for Dubai,” he said.

“While New York has the Hamptons and numerous cities in Europe have their own countrysid­e and seaside getaway spots, Dubai has lacked an area where people leave their primary property and head to a second home for the weekend.”

He said the project would consist of 4,000 units, 1,000 of which have already been sold. The cheapest property at the Heart of Europe is a Dh1.5m unit at The Cote d’Azur Hotel.

Sixty Floating Seahorses have so far been sold. They are currently selling for Dh15m each.

“This year we will hand over 10 Swedish beach palaces, 32 German villas and 40 Floating Seahorses,” Mr Kleindiens­t said.

He rejected suggestion­s that the properties would leave people isolated, as a boat will run to and from the mainland every half an hour.

“We didn’t have coral reefs so we had to build them.

“Having coral reefs is not difficult, what is difficult is having real corals,” he said.

“We started in 2008 and today we operate the biggest coral nursery on the planet and by 2020 we will be capable of producing 100,000 new corals each year.”

He said creating more corals will get around the problem of bleaching, which happens when the water is too warm – something that is a real concern in the waters off Dubai.

The project has received negative publicity over the years, not least when it was reported that one of the Floating Seahorse villas had sunk. This was not the case, according to Mr Kleindiens­t, who said it was actually an event platform that had fallen into the sea.

“We lost agreed sales because of that,” he said.

“My responsibi­lity is to build a great project.

He said they initially charged Dh2,000 per square foot. That figure is now between Dh3,000 and Dh4,000 per square foot.

The cost is even higher for one of the Floating Seahorses.

“We started selling them for Dh5,000 per square foot.

“They are now selling for three times that,” he said.

Mr Kleindiens­t said most of the buyers were from the Middle East, but he has noticed a surge in interest from Japan.

He is targeting the European market because “there are 15 million people in Europe who can afford our properties”, he said. “The biggest real estate investment companies are not involved in the Dubai market yet.”

Mr Kleindiens­t said the Portofino Hotel in the Heart of Europe will also be fully operationa­l by the end of the year.

Only families will be allowed to stay at the 452-room fivestar hotel.

He said work began on the project only this year because the company wanted to set a record for being the first hotel in the emirate to open in the same year that constructi­on began.

 ?? Photos Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? Above and below, views of the Sweden Beach Palace at The World archipelag­o in Dubai. Left, a Floating Seahorse villa
Photos Chris Whiteoak / The National Above and below, views of the Sweden Beach Palace at The World archipelag­o in Dubai. Left, a Floating Seahorse villa
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