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"Phuket’s Property Boom: Luxury Homes on the Rugged West Coast"
By Terry Blackburn
Take a cruise down the west coast of Phuket and from offshore you’ll see
construction sites all over the place. This may be a little surprising
since, onshore, driving down the coast road you’d be unlikely to see any of
them. Tucked away on remote headlands and among the steep hills, a hidden
housing boom is taking place. If you’re making the trip in your own private
yacht then you’re just the kind of person at whom all this activity is
aimed. In less than ten years’ time the topography of the west coast, and
probably the rest of the island as well, will be changed forever. For Phuket
has now firmly entered the era of the Luxury Home.
Leading this revolution are a visionary group of developers who believe the
time is right for ultra-modern, ultra-luxurious and ultra-expensive private
housing on the island. From Nai Thon to Kata, and further inland too, demand
for these palatial properties is showing no sign of abating. So let’s take a
trip down the island and see the sites earmarked as homes for the acutely
wealthy.
Our first port of call is Layan Beach, North of Bang Tao. Like Bang Tao, it
has only recently come into its own as a viable development option thanks to
the vision of Layan Beach Resort owner Pakin Rukteangan and his family. His
father purchased the land over 30 years ago and intended to mine for tin on
the site. Unfortunately, he never found tin in large enough quantities to
make the land a commercial success so, following Amanpuri’s pioneering
blueprint for a combined hotel/residential development, the family decided
to build the Layan Beach Resort.
Pakim is confident of success. “We understand,” he says, “that the location
here is very remote – that’s part of the attraction so it’s necessary to
have common services such as restaurants and the spa.” So far, 52 luxurious
rooms have been completed on a hillside overlooking the beach. Pakim’s next
stage is Layan Burintr, an adjoining site comprising 28 high-end villas.
Like the hotel, these will be designed in a modern Thai style and will be
sold off the plan. “This is important,” says Pakim, “because it allows the
customer to consult with the architect about the number and size of rooms.
We will also offer a full interiors service utilising the best in Asian
furnishings.”
A short distance from Layan on 350 metres of beachfront land between Bang
Tao and Nai Thon, the Trisara development is beginning to take shape.
Originally conceived by Boathouse architect M L Tri Devaluk, Trisara is
aiming high. “We’re building what will be Southeast Asia’s most expensive
and exclusive hotel,” Project Manager Anthony Lark explains. “This will only
have 32 rooms and alongside it we are developing 16 villas. I think
responsible development is the key to what we are doing here. We’re very
lucky to have the coast’s last remaining rainforest on the land, so are
doing as much as possible to avoid damaging it.” To this end, Trisara has
earmarked 850 trees for special protection and built around them. The
centrepiece of the hotel’s lobby will be a mature fig tree.
“We are creating a feeling of being at one with the ocean,” Anthony
continues, “and not overtaking nature, so as to reflect and complement the
culture we live in.” With 10 of the 16 villas sold at around 4.8 million US
dollars each, it seems that buyers are having no trouble sharing Trisara’s
vision.
More contemporary Thai property waits further down the beach at Bang Tao –
but this time with no sea view. Not that that should bother its target
audience too much. “Laguna Golf Villas will be built overlooking the Banyan
Tree Golf Course,” Property Sales Manager, Tara Sudlow, explains. “Obviously
it would be a very attractive place to live for a keen golfer, but we’re
emphasising the fact that the properties are designed very much as family
homes. We’re offering four different styles of houses all designed
specifically for the site by JP Architects who also designed all the Laguna
hotels.” Laguna Property is an established player in the development market
having already completed and sold Allamanda, Sheraton and Banyan Tree Villas
at the Laguna site. In common with many developments, it offers a rental
service, allowing buyers to recoup their investment when they are not in
residence. “We’re finding that the hotels’ regular guests who return year
after year increasingly want a home to stay in instead,” Tara explains.
“They love the
Laguna concept and trust the services we offer. They also understand that
Laguna will continue to grow financially, so buying here represents a sound
investment.”
So who is the average luxury home buyer? William Pinsent, Director of Phuket
Land, first bought property on the island in 1981 and has been involved in
six major developments since. He is therefore well placed to comment on the
current boom. “The demographic of people buying here has changed
significantly in the past five years,” he says. “Before the economic crash
of 1998, many Thai nationals bought land and property for investment
purposes here and if foreigners did buy property, it tended to be as a
retirement home or purely as a holiday home. Now, as Phuket is becoming a
business centre in its own right, the trend is more towards business people
based in Asia - Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur or Singapore for example – who see
the island as somewhere that has the infrastructure to allow them to run
their business from here. Some people are relocating here entirely.
Essentially, they are buying into a lifestyle. Phuket obviously has great
weather, great beaches and friendly people. It now also has world-class
flight connections, schools and services.”
Michael Weinstein, Managing Director of Phuket Island Villas Co., agrees
that improved infrastructure has led to rapidly increasing prices. “In the
last 20 months, land with a sea view has risen from 3-5 million baht per rai
to 10-12 million,” he says. “On the west coast ‘Luxury Home’ properties
which didn’t even exist a few years ago have now become a reality and may
soon become the norm. In some cases prices are increasing so rapidly that a
property’s value can rise 90 percent between inception and construction.”
Phuket Island Villas is currently marketing Baan Thai Surin Hill, a
development that overlooks both Surin and Bang Tao bays. The project will
comprise holiday homes and estate villas. “This allows people a range of
options,” says Michael. “The holiday homes will be considerably cheaper, but
buyers will have greater privacy and more design choice with the villas.
Thai-style is also popular with foreign buyers, but these days people expect
high quality Western interiors as well.”
This is a point that O. B. Wetzel, MD of Development Management Group Co and
project manager of Amanpuri, thinks buyers should consider carefully.
“Basically,” he says, “developers and buyers should try to use appropriate
technology where possible. We can now build properties with computerised
air-con and security, ISDN lines, fibre optic cables, sub-zero refrigerators
and other high quality appliances – but all these things require careful
maintenance. This can be expensive and buyers should bear this in mind.”
Also in the hills above Surin we find Baan Thai Cherng Lay. MD Veerasak
Sirivangsanti completed the project’s show home over a year ago and plots
have been selling well ever since. “This sort of Thai-style villa was
popularised by the Amanpuri,” Veerasak says, “and I am very grateful to them
for that. But those I’m building here are intended for use as year-round
residential properties. Building the show house has proved very useful to us
– buyers come and see the quality of the building and know what they will be
getting. I always try and use the best materials available, such as teak and
granite, because they not only look beautiful, but are hard-wearing.”
Cruising on to Kamala we see Laem Son. Utilising a very traditional,
freestanding pavilion style; palatial is perhaps the best word to describe
the properties. Only seven villas will be built on the site with each one
occupying more than 1500 square metres. “Each villa enjoys an uninterrupted
sea view,” Somchart Ubolochart, MD of Piyalai Villa Phuket, one of the
project’s developers, explains. “As one walks through the villa, the open
pavilions change the perspective of the view. Water is very much an integral
part of the development and we have added lotus ponds all around the
property to create a relaxed ambiance.”
Potential buyers will have to move fast though as five of the seven villas
have already been sold for between 2-3 million US dollars a piece. Laem Son
is taking the unusual step of building the final two properties unsold to
ensure harmonised construction. The group is confident that buyers will soon
be found.
Global trends, especially the expected recession, may suggest that their
confidence is misplaced. Not so says William Pinsent. “Thailand, in
comparison with its neighbours, is enjoying a period of relative economic
and political stability. At the same time, the weak baht makes it a good
time to invest here and, as dot.com companies’ shares fluctuate and fall,
the sort of business people who can afford it, see property as a good,
stable long-term investment,” he says.
William Pinsent is happy to put his money where his mouth is. His company,
Island Land Sales, is developing Jomchang - 11 villas on 35 rai of land on a
headland near Kamala. The development is made possible by a new road,
currently under construction, which will stretch around the headland from
Kamala to Patong. “I call it the ‘Miracle Mile’,” says O.B. Wetzel whose
company is the project management for Jomchang. “Almost all the land on the
headland is sold and with good reason – it offers amazing sea views, total
privacy and convenient access to Patong, Laguna and the airport.”
“The key feature of Jomchang is privacy,” explains Pinsent. “For this reason
we’ve retained ownership of some of the land to ensure no building ever
takes place on it and no one overlooks their neighbours. This is made
possible by the fact that all the buildings fit into the contours of the
land. The development blends smoothly with the natural landscape.” Luckily
for Phuket, environmentally sensitive development is very much in vogue.
Most developers try to leave natural features in place and intrude on the
environment as little as possible. Samsara, on Laem Thip headland close to
Patong, takes its environmental responsibilities a little further than most.
Samsara will have its own self-sustaining water source, centralised
waste-treatment and hot water heated by waste air-con heat.
While buyers will no doubt appreciate this environmental stance, they will
also approve of Samsara’s innovative design. “Our architects, Original
Vision, have created an ultra-modern, high-specification design utilising
aspects of the traditional Thai look,” Tony Daniels of Asia Island Homes
explains. “For example, all the properties will have floor-to-ceiling
windows and Thai roofs. This not only affords fantastic views, it will
create the illusion of the roofs floating above the property when viewed at
night.”
Having lived on Phuket all her life, Yaowalak Sangiamkul has seen many
positive and negative changes take place on the island. An avid nature
lover, she is very pleased to be a part of the current wave of responsible
development. “If built properly, properties should blend into the natural
landscape. That’s what I’ve tried to achieve at Nakatani and Baan Chai Lei”.
At both hillside villa developments on the road to Patong, Yaowalak,
President of the Nakatani Group, has carefully removed all non-indigenous
trees and plants and replaced them with local ones. “I try to create a
unique tropical garden in each one,” she says. Indeed when she’s not in the
office negotiating with prospective buyers she can often be found personally
tending one of the gardens.
Sailing down past Patong and into Kata, we find Phase 3 of M.L. Tri
Devaluk’s other current development – Baan Kata. With Phase 1 and 2 already
completed further down the beach, everyone is confident that Phase 3, on the
hillside overlooking Kata Noi, will be equally successful. “Mom Tri will be
personally designing all the villas,” GM Khun Pirawat explains. “Each buyer
will be able to meet with him and discuss the specifications that are most
suitable for them. This process should take about three months and then
construction will begin.”
Also in Kata is the Katamanda development. “We’ve had an enormous amount of
interest in the last year,” Director of Sales and Marketing Sean Power says.
To what does Sean attribute this rapid success? “I think our location holds
a great appeal. We’re only a five-minute walk from Kata beach. Many of our
buyers are retired or semi-retired and are looking for a permanent home.
They appreciate a sense of community. Also, the quality of the construction
is very important – I believe our concrete and steel infrastructure is among
the finest in the world. High quality and low maintenance is the key.” About
2 million US will allow you to buy into this particular exclusive community.
And there our journey ends, with another developer with a vision for the
future. As long as there are customers out there with money to spend on the
perfect home, someone somewhere on Phuket will probably have the means to
build it. If you already have the necessary millions then be sure to move
quickly, dreams are selling fast.
Moving Inland on the Island
A quiet environment, safe playing areas for children, a sense of community –
at an affordable price. For those who are raising families, a different set
of criteria guides their housing choices. Beach-front property is fine for a
holiday, or the wealthier visitor, but for families, the price tag for a sea
view puts these luxury villas well beyond reach. Fortunately there are other
choices.
Across the island on the southeast end is where, “For the money buyers spend
on west coast property, it’s possible to get a palace,” according to O.B.
Wetzel. Indeed such palaces exist at the Land and Houses and Ban Prangthong
developments in Chalong. Here Sino-Portuguese colonial is very much the
preferred style and the buyer demographic changes slightly. “About 60
percent of buyers here are local Thais,” says Ban Prangthong MD, Nopparat
Thongtan. “I think local business people appreciate the close proximity of
our development to Phuket Town.” In addition to a convenient location,
houses at Ban Prangthong can also offer two or three stories, perhaps eight
or nine bedrooms, an equal number of bathrooms, 24-hour security and a
swimming pool as well.
Over at Land and Houses, MD Pittaya Tantipriyakij has recently completed his
first million dollar property – a grand colonial lakeside mansion facing his
latest development, Chollada Lake View. “The feedback we’ve had so far from
buyers has been very positive,” Pittaya says. “Sales have been surprisingly
swift. Really it’s a question of giving people what they want. I think
consultation is the key to success. Who knows, in the future if there is
enough interest we may dig a manmade lagoon to build property around.”
Another intangible but important advantage these estates offer is the
interchange of cultures. It is here, where children play together, where
your neighbour might be Scandinavian, English, German or Thai, that
tolerance and understanding begin.
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