Deccan Chronicle

Millenials prefer location over size in top cities DEALERS ARE shrinking apartment sizes to make housing projects more pocket-friendly for a higher customer base; While Mumbai topped the list, Bangalore saw the least decline

- SANGEETHA G

The top seven Indian cities collective­ly saw average apartment sizes shrink by nearly 17 per cent between

2014 and 2018.

On an average apartments have become smaller from 1390 sq ft in 2014 to

1100 sq ft in 2018.

In order to make housing projects more pocket-friendly for a higher customer base, developers are shrinking the sizes of the apartments, finds Anarock Property Consultant­s.

Among the top cities, Mumbai topped the list with a 27 per cent average decrease in apartment sizes — from 960 sq. ft in 2014 to 700 sq. ft. in 2018.

Delhi-NCR was the sizes coming down by 16 per cent from 1,485 sq ft to

1,250 sq ft in the five years. Kolkata saw the sizes reducing by 23 per cent and Chennai 14 per cent.

Bangalore saw the least decline in size at around

12 per cent in five years. The current average size in Bangalore is 1260 sq ft.

Prior to 2017, the average sizes in Bangalore fluctuated by 1-2 per cent y-o-y. But in 2018, they dropped by over 12 per cent against the preceding year.

Hyderabad currently has the highest average property sizes about 1,600 sq. ft. Property buyers in Hyderabad have traditiona­lly preferred large-sized homes.

The maximum reduction in average property was seen in the budget housing priced less than `40 lakh. The average size of homes priced below `40 lakh was

750 sq. ft. in 2014 and it reduced by 23 per cent in

2018. Apartment sizes in the luxury-housing, priced above `80 lakh also saw a

20 per cent reduction over the last five years. The average size of properties in this segment was 1,830 sq. ft. in 2014, which came down to 1,460 sq. ft. in 2018. Mid-segment housing priced between `40-`80 lakh saw the least size reduction of 17 per cent — from 1,150 sq. ft. in 2014 to around 950 sq. ft. in 2018.

According to Anarock the millennial­s preference­s are key changes in the apartment sizes. Millennial homebuyers prefer affordabil­ity coupled with good location over larger-sized homes in the far-flung suburbs. Rahul Bajaj, one of the most successful business leaders of India and the charismati­c patriarch of the Bajaj Group, has resigned as chairman of Bajaj Finserv and will take over as the Chairman Emeritus from mid-May.

Bajaj, 80, through a letter dated Feb. 15, has tendered his resignatio­n, which will be effective from the conclusion of the board meeting scheduled for May 16, Bajaj Finserv said in a regulatory filing on Wednesday.

His appointmen­t as Chairman Emeritus will be effective from May 16, it added.

Stock of Bajaj Finserv closed 1.22 percent higher at `6,920 on BSE.

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