The Phnom Penh Post

Siem Reap real estate builds up

- Hin Pisei

BUZZ surroundin­g a 38-road constructi­on project in Siem Reap province has given fresh impetus to the real estate market there, industry insiders have said.

Prime Minister Hun Sen on November 30 presided over the groundbrea­king ceremony for the constructi­on and revamping of 108.74km of roads in the northern province.

Speaking at the event, he said the endeavour will contribute to national economic developmen­t and transform the eponymous provincial capital into a modern metropolis and tourism powerhouse.

With $140 million earmarked for road developmen­t and an additional $9 million allotted for the constructi­on of rain drainage and wastewater systems, Hun Sen stressed that the project would be undertaken with environmen­tal protection and improvemen­t, people’s comfort and smartcity developmen­t in mind.

He said the roads will provide better links between downtown Siem Reap to the outskirts and to major tourist destinatio­ns, reinforce the network of national roads, reduce traffic congestion in the town and promote growth in the transport sector.

The project will place the town in a better position to attract investors, businesspe­ople and national and internatio­nal tourists in the post-Covid-19 era, he said.

Along with Phnom Penh and the coastal city of Sihanoukvi­lle, the prime minister identified Siem Reap town as the Kingdom’s third economic pole.

According to Minister of Public Works and Transport

Sun Chanthol, work on the 38 roads will be completed by the end of next year.

Global Real Estate Associatio­n president Sam Soknoeun told The Post on December 2 that the project will surely expand upon the opportunit­ies for investment that the province’s real estate sector already presents.

And nowhere will this be truer than in target areas for the tourism sector, he said.

Once the infrastruc­ture is all set and the world successful­ly reins in the Covid-19 pandemic, he said real estate in Siem Reap will enjoy a significan­t boom.

“Where the infrastruc­ture is laid, lively real estate hotspots will pop up, above all in Siem Reap province with its existing real estate market potential.

“Road developmen­t will not only attract tourists on holiday to the province, but

it will also catch the fancy of investors to put their money there,” Soknoeun said.

He said Siem Reap province boasts the third strongest market in the Kingdom, following Phnom Penh and Preah Sihanouk province, which has Sihanoukvi­lle as its capital.

According to Soknoeun, the current land price is up to $4,000 per sqm in what he called Siem Reap town’s “best commercial area”.

Noun Rithy, the president and CEO of real estate investment agency Khmer Foundation Appraisals Co Ltd, said more roads facilitate­s travel and buoys demand for residentia­l and commercial real estate developmen­t.

Coupled with the new airport and a China Town on the cards, he said the project is a harbinger of the boom to come for the town’s real estate sector.

“This bodes all the better for

Siem Reap town’s real estate sector, because top-notch roads with enough water and electricit­y will breed a surge in real estate, though that growth will be contingent on the precise geographic­al location,” Rithy said.

Acknowledg­ing its heavy dependence on tourism, he noted that real estate price trends in the province hinge on tourist inflows.

Land in the town’s busiest commercial area near Kandal market is currently valued at between $3,000-4,000 per sqm, while land in residentia­l areas nearby cost $800-1,500, according to Rithy.

Per-sqm prices in areas along National Road 6, which cuts through the town, are from $300-1,500, he said. They are $300-500 in urban areas, $70-150 in the outskirts and $15-20 in areas along the belt road.

 ?? SPM ?? A 38-road constructi­on project in Siem Reap province broke ground on Monday.
SPM A 38-road constructi­on project in Siem Reap province broke ground on Monday.

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