Bottom of the market called as mega projects including 拢1.2bn Tameer Towers return to site

Contractors have restarted work on a string of huge projects in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, as evidence builds that the market in the UAE is recovering.

Tameer Towers, a 7bn dirham (拢1.2bn) 9 million ft2 mixed-use project in the Shams development on Al Rheem island in Abu Dhabi, was put under review in March, but is now going ahead again.

A 400m dirham (拢68m) project to build a headquarters for the municipal government of Abu Dhabi鈥檚 western region is also back on site, having been on hold for six months.

In addition, a residential project of up to 1 million ft2 by developer Bloom Properties in Abu Dhabi, has restarted.

Duncan Swinhoe, who leads Gensler鈥檚 Middle East operation, which is involved on all three schemes, said: 鈥淭hings are starting to move in Dubai and Abu Dhabi again. There are a number of projects coming out, and some tenders from as far back as nine months ago that we鈥檇 almost given up on are back on the table.鈥

Regarding the Tameer Towers scheme, which had 300 men on site when work was put under review, he said: 鈥淭hey鈥檙e now pouring concrete and the new contract price is being thrashed out.鈥

Tameer has dropped the alliance of three contractors it was using on the scheme 鈥 two local firms Al Habtoor Engineering and Al Rajhi Projects, and Murray & Roberts (South African) in favour of one, Al Rajhi. It said in March it was 鈥渞eviewing the construction programmes and associated costs鈥 of the scheme.

Swinhoe added that some schemes that had not started on site, but on which 鈥渁ll decision-making had ground to a halt鈥, were live again.

Meanwhile, Davis Langdon is recruiting about 15 staff in the Middle East, including in the UAE.

Steve Coates, the consultant鈥檚 head of UAE, said: 鈥淲e believe we鈥檝e hit rock bottom and now an element of liquidity is slowly coming back to Dubai.鈥

He said the cash was coming mainly from the $20bn (拢12.5bn) bond Dubai had secured from Abu Dhabi in March, the second $10bn of which is to be released imminently, according to reports. Commentators also say the UAE has been boosted by a rise in the price of oil, which is now at $60-70 a barrel, having hit a low of $32 in December.

The UAE building boom began to falter a year ago and 566 projects in the country are on hold, according to research firm Proleads. In August, 好色先生TV reported that Dubai鈥檚 main arbitration body was facing a backlog of almost 拢3bn of disputes.

Projects in UAE

  • Total value, including those on hold: $900bn (拢545bn)
  • In the commercial sector, 147 projects are on hold and 340 are either under construction or out to tender
  • In hospitality, 288 projects are in construction or out to tender, with 118 cancelled or on hold
  • In residential, 495 projects are in construction or out to tender, with 217 cancelled or on hold
  • In retail, 249 projects are in construction or out to tender, with 84 on hold and no cancellations

Source: Proleads