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Home owners in Malwa, Dom's housing estate of single-family houses, have it all: a peaceful residential neighbourhood and proximity to the capital's city centre. |

Dom specialises in building, marketing and selling low-cost and well-designed housing in Warsaw. |

Oaza housing estate, one of Dom's many residential developments. |
The EBRD supports affordable housing in Warsaw.
After finding a job, what is the most acute problem for millions of young
Poles nowadays? Until recently, finding an affordable flat was nearly
impossible for many average-income families. In Poland there are, on average,
just 310 housing units per 1,000 inhabitants, compared with 450 in western
Europe.
Now an EBRD loan of €30 million to Polish real estate developer Dom
Development SA will turn the dream of home ownership into reality for over
2,000 Warsaw inhabitants. Dom will use part of the money to build the
18-hectare Park Mokotów project, which will be one of the largest housing
developments in Europe.
"This is the first time the Bank is financing residential housing in our
region," stresses Tim Norman, the Bank's operations leader on the Dom project.
"It's something we have been trying to do ever since the Bank was established.
There is no doubt that if you had to pick one form of real estate, the housing
market is the one needing the most investment, not only in Poland, but in the
entire region."
Polish-UK expertise
As housing property projects tend to be short-lived, part of the Bank's
difficulty was finding a competent and experienced housing developer with a
long-term interest in residential real estate. In Dom, the Bank has found a
perfect combination of western investor expertise and competent Polish
management. Dom Poland is 81 per cent owned by the Dutch holding company Dom
Development BV; most of the remaining shares are held by Polish staff. The
main shareholder in Dom BV is Yves Bonavero, a London-based financier with
mortgage and real estate expertise.
Dom specialises in building, marketing and selling low-cost and well-designed
housing in Warsaw. Since 1996 Dom has become the second largest developer in
Warsaw, selling over 750 apartments per year.
"There is no point for British housing developers to go to the Polish market
and build houses for Poles," says Mr. Norman. "Residential housing is a very
localised business and you need to have a feel for the market, to be sensitive
to what local people want, where they want to live and how much they are
willing to pay for a roof over their heads."
So far the company has built over 4,000 relatively low-cost, well-designed
housing units. One is the Oaza development, built on a very long strip of
'brown-field' reclaimed land in Warsaw. This development demonstrates the
efficient and creative use of very expensive land in the middle of a
densely-built city. Dom has turned Oaza into two small double-courtyard
projects - real estate of international standard and good value for the money.
Housing shortage
And money does matter to Dom's clients, most of whom are first-time buyers.
The developer views them as its core market and believes the chronic shortage
of inexpensive housing in Poland will continue to provide the impetus for the
company's growth. Dom also hopes to use EBRD 'mezzanine' financing to
diversify its product portfolio to include high-end apartments and more
expensive single-family houses. Mezzanine financing is not widely available
today to medium-sized Polish borrowers. The financing, unsecured and
subordinated to the senior debt, will equip the company with a stronger
capital base and more permanent funding.
"The combination of UK and Polish expertise was key to Dom's success,"
explains Mr Norman. "Because Dom's owners have broad experience in the UK
residential property market, the company took on many of the sales and
marketing incentives from western markets and successfully replicated them in
Poland."
But the use of highly trained and motivated sales staff, extensive public
relations and advertising campaigns are only part of the company's strategy
for success. "Together with a local bank, Dom has developed innovative
consumer financing for home buyers," says Silke Katzenmeier, a member of the
Bank's project team. "The company also accepts 'housing deposit accounts',
also known as 'housing booklets'. For years, Poles paid into these accounts
which were, in essence, 'trapped funds' that could only be used to finance
properties bought from state-owned housing co-operatives. Accepting these
deposits has earned Dom numerous new first time home buyers who wouldn't
otherwise be able to get onto the property ladder."
Contact: The EBRD Property,
Tourism and Shipping Team
10 April 2003
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