New Straits Times

Moscow luxury real estate soaring

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MOSCOW real estate executives Boris Azarenko and Denis Kitaev should write the United Kingdom Home Office a thank-you note. Their company, luxury apartment developer Vesper, is seeing a pickup in demand from wealthy Russians, as Britain’s anti-money laundering measures block many from London, once their favourite city.

In one way, Russian President Vladimir Putin is also a winner from the UK’s efforts as well as internatio­nal sanctions imposed over Russia’s annexation of Crimea, the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in England, and Russian meddling in United States elections in 2016. Putin has called for years for his country’s rich citizens to bring their assets back to Russia. In the past two decades, Russians have been major buyers of property in Paris, London, New York and other internatio­nal cities.

Now there are signs that sanctions and tightened anti-money laundering measures are having some effect. Last year, there were more than 1,000 luxury property sales in Moscow, up from 790 in 2017, totalling more than 77 billion rubles (RM4.77 billion), according to broker Knight Frank. Luxury property markets in Moscow have held up well even as the economy has been in the doldrums since sanctions and demand for real estate in other global cities has cooled.

“If previously we had some kind of dogma that a wealthy person needs a house in London or New York, now it’s not a rare proposal from our clients to take their property in Chelsea as partial payment for a new apartment in Moscow,” said Azarenko, 41, the general director of Vesper, the biggest developer of luxury property in Moscow.

Russia has plenty of rich people. There are at least 189,500 ultra-high net worth individual­s in the country controllin­g about US$1.1 trillion, according to Capgemini estimates. It’s also incredibly unequal. There are 26 Russians on the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, a ranking of the world’s 500 wealthiest people, worth about a combined US$271 billion.

While Vesper builds new properties, such as its Brodsky building, most of its projects are massive renovation­s of Czarist-era properties. It redesigns them inside and out and adds amenities like builtin saunas, gyms, undergroun­d parking garages, and ornate, secure lobbies. Most of the buildings are in prime locations in the center of Moscow.

Vesper favours naming the properties after Russian writers. Bulgakov House is near Patriarch’s Ponds, the setting for the opening chapters of Mikhail Bulgakov’s novel “The Master and Margarita”; the Chekhov building is near the Chekhov Metro Station.

The six-story Nabokov, another newly built property, is named after writer Vladimir Nabokov, an avid butterfly collector, and features 150 brightly coloured glass butterflie­s on the ceiling of the lobby. The vast white cube in the centre of Moscow is covered in 42,800 bars of Portuguese limestone and has 14 units and a penthouse.

Vesper has created more than 103,000 square metres of new residentia­l space in the last three years. Azarenko shares the business, which was founded in 2010 and had 12.6 billion rubles of revenue last year, with Kitaev, 41.

The partners’ strategy is typically to acquire century-old buildings cheaply and turn them into ready-to-move-in apartments, which is a new idea for Moscow. Gulrich House, an old mansion built in the early 20th-century by Gustav Gulrich in the heart of Moscow, was first renovated in this way.

One of Vesper’s recent project, named after Vladimir Nabokov, was built from scratch.

HUGE COUNTRY

Priced at 1.9 million rubles per square metre, the apartments in Nabokov are about 10 per cent cheaper than similar properties in Manhattan.

Azarenko said prices haven’t changed much in dollar terms since sanctions were imposed in 2014, while the ruble has depreciate­d by about 50 per cent since that time. He also said buyers from informatio­n technologi­es, pharmaceut­icals and agricultur­e have increasing­ly expressed interest, after the Russian government imposed measures limiting imports from Western countries in some of these industries.

Vesper expects revenue this year to grow by about 15 per cent, thanks to limited supply and tightening of local constructi­on rules.

“Despite sanctions and the state of Russian economy, you should understand that Moscow is the centre of a huge countr y, and ever yone wants to live here,” said Azarenko.

If previously we had some kind of dogma that a wealthy person needs a house in London or New York, now it’s not a rare proposal from our clients to take their property in Chelsea as partial payment for a new apartment in Moscow.” BORIS AZARENKO Vesper general director

 ?? ILYA IVANOV/BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Nabokov House in Moscow.
ILYA IVANOV/BLOOMBERG PIC Nabokov House in Moscow.
 ?? VLADIMIR VASILCHIKO­V/BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Boris Azarenko and Denis Kitaev.
VLADIMIR VASILCHIKO­V/BLOOMBERG PIC Boris Azarenko and Denis Kitaev.
 ?? DIMA ZVEREV/BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Gulrich House.
DIMA ZVEREV/BLOOMBERG PIC Gulrich House.

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