GOLF GRABS BULGARIA!At
present time there are only three golf courses in
whole of Bulgaria: one at Elin Pelin, near
capital, Sofia, and two owned by Air Sofia. These are located at Ihtiman, opened in 2000, 40km from Sofia, and at Sliven, opened in 2004, 90km from
Black Sea.
Because of
increasingly rapid rise in foreign interest in Bulgaria recently, several more golf courses are proposed. One of these will be located at Razgrad, in
north-east, about 90km from
Black Sea. More are scheduled to open in
next few years: two at Kavarna and one at Primorsko, near Sozopol.
Mountain and ski areas will be represented by a golf course in
ski town of Bansko this year, and a very large golf complex between Kostenets and Borovets,
country's foremost ski resort. This is scheduled for 2007,
year of Bulgaria's entry into
European Union, and will be located at Dolna Banya, already near Bulgaria's first golf course at Ihtiman.
BulgariaProperties.net Ltd has purchased almost 6 acres of prime development land adjacent to
proposed golf course at Dolna Banya. The plans are to construct about 220 apartments around a comprehensive sports complex, with access to
golf course by a short footpath. The amenities on site are to include tennis, volleyball, squash, badminton, lawn bowls, boules (boccia), shooting, archery, croquet, mountain biking, and fishing nearby. Indoor facilities will include a 140-seat main restaurant and cabaret stage, a huge main bar (perhaps
largest in Bulgaria), a sports bar with projection TV, snooker, pool, table football, table tennis, a Chinese restaurant, Indian restaurant, fast food cafeteria, pizzeria, gymnasium, sauna, massage parlour, clinic, chemist, sports shop and minimarket.
Steve Avery, a Director of BulgariaProperties.net Ltd, said, “It may sound like a cliché, but we really were in
right place at
right time! After two years in this business, I just couldn’t believe my luck to find such a gem. Anyone involved in this project should make a serious return on their investment.”
On Borovets and Bansko generally, Steve had this to say: “Apart from having ski lifts and ski runs, these two towns are quite different from each other, and appeal to different groups of people. Bansko is an old, traditional residential town with lots of character and no fewer than 180 quaint taverns full of local people singing and dancing to a typical Bulgarian folk band. Borovets, by contrast, is purely a resort, with hotels, modern west European-style bars and night-clubs, cafés and restaurants. Residential property and holiday homes are therefore readily available in Bansko, but not in Borovets, where
closest you can get is usually in one of
surrounding villages.
‘As for property values, Bansko went mad for a period of three months at
end of 2003, with land prices doubling, and then calmed down. Many poor goatherders suddenly found that they were rich. Nothing wrong with that, I say. Since then values have been pretty steady there until now, when they’re starting to creep up again. The reason for this is that
sudden surge in foreign tourists to Bansko has left
supply of holiday accommodation woefully short of
demand. And this trend shows no sign of abating. To try to cope with it, there have sprung up many hotels and apartment projects, but it seems unlikely that even these will be able to satisfy
demand for accommodation for several years yet. As a result,
prices for such apartments range from 1,000 Euros per sq.m. for a ground-floor unit facing away from
mountains, to 1,350 Euros per sq.m. for a top-floor example with a mountain view. Yet, people buy them. I guess, because a 1 bedroom 60sq.m. apartment for £41,000 is still a far better deal than you’d get in Spain. I’ve heard developers claim that 90% of their apartments are sold within 3 weeks! I only hope that we have such luck when ours are released in April!
‘In this respect Borovets, again, is different. Although it’s Bulgaria’s first and best-known ski resort, it stagnated for years… until now. The ‘Super Borovets’ project, funded by EU, governmental, foreign and local business sources, is scheduled to run from 2005 to 2009, and will revitalise
whole region around
town to a radius of 10-12km. This has already started to affect property values in
surrounding areas. To give an example, in March 2004 we bought, unseen, a half-acre plot in a village 15km from Borovets. When I visited it, I discovered that it wasn’t suitable for building apartments; so, I put it on
market in August. By November it was sold at an 80% profit – after all costs were deducted!
‘I am personally of
opinion that
‘Bansko effect’ could strike around Borovets at any moment. That’s
reason why BulgariaProperties.net Ltd is developing four projects here, and only two in Bansko. We can sell these apartments about 15% cheaper – at
moment, anyway. Borovets must surely offer a better return on investment, regardless of
type of property bought: land, a shack, whatever. You won’t find new apartments easily, though. As far as we know, BulgariaProperties.net Ltd is
only developer building them. I don’t, however, expect this monopoly to last for long.
‘Bulgaria’s third ski region is at Pamporovo, which, like Borovets, is purely a resort. Funding is starting to come in, but full development, if it happens at all, is likely to follow several years behind Borovets. Its distance from Sofia (a day’s drive) makes it less attractive to visitors from north and west Europe. It is, however, popular with Greeks, because of its proximity to
frontier. One of Bulgaria’s major motorway routes to Greece will pass very close to Pamporovo, and this should boost its popularity, as well as making
Mediterranean Sea more accessible.
‘Property values are lower here than in Bansko and Borovets, but are creeping up gradually. I reckon that Pamporovo is a good long-term prospect; say five to ten years. The only reason why BulgariaProperties.net Ltd has no developments here is because I’ll probably have retired before
boom happens.”
How does a mountain area investment compare with coastal properties?
“Significant differences yet again. Until recently, most of
investment was flooding into
northern Black Sea coast resorts, from Varna down to Sunny Beach. The area became very popular as a result of
Bulgarian government’s ‘Bulgaria
Beautiful’ TV campaign back in
‘80s, and
subsequent interest of package tour operators. Now that
north is saturated with developments,
interest has begun to creep down
coast. This is causing a steep rise in property values. They are still lower than those in
north, but
gap is closing. An investment in
south should therefore offer a better ROI.