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Saudi Arabia developer to sell ultra-luxury homes in niche Wadi Safar ‘Bel Air’ district

▶ Up to 50 residences in the exclusive community are on sale for a starting price of $25 million each

- DEENA KAMEL Riyadh

Diriyah Company, the developer turning Saudi Arabia’s historic district into a vast tourism project, is selling luxury homes in its Wadi Safar community as part of its broader residentia­l strategy.

The company plans to sell between 40 and 50 units at a minimum price of $25 million each.

The upscale units in Wadi Safar, west of Diriyah, are aimed at “ultra high-net-worth” buyers and already have a waiting list, Diriyah Company chief executive Jerry Inzerillo said.

The developmen­t will also feature a championsh­ip golf course and a polo club.

“When you look at Riyadh as a city of 15 million people in the context of 2030, Diriyah will be, as a comparison, a pedestrian-friendly cultural heritage [similar to] Beverly Hills in the metropolis of Los Angeles,” Mr Inzerillo said.

“Diriyah is the Beverly Hills. But Wadi Safar is Bel Air – very, very high-net-worth.”

Saudi Arabia is developing its capital to become one of the world’s biggest 10 cities as part of its economic reform strategy, with projection­s that Riyadh’s population will double to 15 million by 2030.

To meet this target, it is adding real estate projects around the city, including a host of housing options at its Diriyah project.

The Diriyah Company is also selling 106 Ritz Carlton-branded luxury villas, priced between 9 million Saudi riyals ($2.4 million) to 26 million riyals.

“We decided to test the high end of the market to see where the market is going,” Mr Inzerillo said.

Buyers have put down a total of more than one billion riyals in deposits on more than 71 of these residences while the remaining villas have been reserved for top government officials and royalty, he said.

“They went very fast. We said that when we get to 75 per cent of the sales, we will hold some back,” Mr Inzerillo said.

The villas have three to five bedrooms and are between 315 square metres and 860 square metres in size.

“We were successful in understand­ing where the market is. Now, we have a feeling of where the market is on the low end and high end,” Mr Inzerillo said.

The $63.2 billion Diriyah project will span 14 square kilometres and have 42 hotels, more than 100 restaurant­s, nine museums and 30,000 homes when it is completed in 2030. The residentia­l plans at Diriyah come amid a shortage of accommodat­ion caused by an influx of residents into the kingdom, which is offering a 30-year tax break as an incentive for global companies to move their regional headquarte­rs there.

House prices in Riyadh have increased by 45 per cent to 50 per cent since January 2020, which has begun to dampen demand, consultanc­y Knight Frank said in a summer 2023 report. However, the influx of domestic migrants and foreign workers has begun to create more demand for rental property in Riyadh, with 62 per cent of the capital’s residents keen on renting than owning, the report showed.

This is being driven by a shortage in cheaper housing and more workers moving to Riyadh from elsewhere within the kingdom, it said.

On the supply side, the kingdom’s Ministry of Housing is focusing on providing affordable options to meet the growth in demand and achieve the government’s 70 per cent home-ownership target by the end of the decade.

Several projects have been delivered during the first half of 2023, adding about 23,000 “affordable” units, the Knight Frank report said.

Under its residentia­l strategy, Diriyah will have “an extremely wide range” of housing options, said Mr Inzerillo.

It will include homes for Saudis and residents who will live and work in Diriyah, which is set to become a “walkable” city. Diriyah will be home to Saudi Arabia’s version of “Silicon Valley” as it becomes a base to 500 technology companies, 100 media companies and 50 entertainm­ent companies, he said.

As the district becomes a base for hundreds of companies, it is expected to create demand for studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments.

The residentia­l units will be available to rent, with plans for freehold property in the future, Mr Inzerillo said.

The master plan for the historical city is designed with an emphasis on being pedestrian-friendly, in line with the requiremen­ts of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, said Mr Inzerillo.

“The Crown Prince didn’t see Diriyah in a kinetic energy of Cairo or Rome. He saw it as a walkable Florence, Marakkesh, Fez, Siena.

“We want people to walk or bicycle or scooter to work, pray and live … the way you would in a city.”

Diriyah will be a pedestrian-friendly cultural heritage similar to Beverly Hills in the metropolis of Los Angeles JERRY INZERILLO

Diriyah Company chief executive

 ?? Diriyah Company ?? The Wadi Safar community in Saudi Arabia’s historic district on the outskirts of Riyadh will be home to a championsh­ip golf course and polo club
Diriyah Company The Wadi Safar community in Saudi Arabia’s historic district on the outskirts of Riyadh will be home to a championsh­ip golf course and polo club

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