The unregulated housing market took a step ahead towards an organised future
with a brand new concept -- rental housing.

Recently, Mumbai-based real estate developer Housing Development &
Infrastructure and Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority joined
hands to provide rental housing to about 43,000 low-income families.

They will develop 525 acres of land in Virar, the northern suburb of Mumbai.
HDIL will construct these houses and hand it free of cost to MMRDA, which in
turn will rent them out at its terms and conditions.

*What is rental housing?*

These properties are built specifically for the purpose of renting and are
owned by real estate investment trusts (REITs) or corporates, and not by
individuals. In most developed countries, like the US, this market is
organised. For India, this is the first initiative of its kind.

*The specifications*

The project, located around 2 km from Virar railway station, will be
completed by 2015 in four phases. The first 10,000 units (160 sq. ft each)
will be ready by March 2011.

The layout of the houses, which have 160 sq. ft carpet area, has been
approved by the City and Industrial Development Corporation of Maharashtra
(CIDCO) and meets all the standard norms for high rise structures. The
14-storey buildings will be quake-resistant.

Experts believe that the monthly rentals for these units would be around Rs
2,000. While the supply will not eat into the rental demand from the middle
and upper middle class sections, it could eat into the demand for slums on
rent.

*Rental demand*

According to a paper published by UN-Habitat and UNESCAP, 'Housing the Poor
in Asian Cities', 87 per cent people in India own their own houses, 11 per
cent are living on rent, while 3 per cent belong to the 'others' category.

However, the paper adds that rental housing is more common in cities than in
rural areas and varies greatly among cities within the same country. For
example, though the national average of people living on rent in India is
only 11 per cent, the average in Bangalore is 55 per cent.

Says Pranay Vakil, chairman, Knight Frank India, a real estate consultancy
firm: "In every city, there is a floating population of around 30-35 per
cent. They may not necessarily want to own a house in the city but they want
to rent out one."

*The problems*

Though the demand for rental housing is high, such projects have not been
popular due to certain problems. "The Rent Control Act, whcih varies from
state to state, was the major factor," says Vakil. The Act protects the
interest of tenants but then there are many buildings in Mumbai where
tenants are still paying rents at 1940 levels, says Vakil.

The hassle associated with evicting a tenant discourages investors. Besides,
rental yields in residential units is low -- on an average, it is 5-6 per
cent of the total market value of the house. For a person who wants to
invest in rental housing, taking a loan at a higher rate than the yield from
the home does not make financial sense.

"However, financially, it does make sense if the Floor Space Index is
changed, and the government has done that," says Vakil.

FSI is the ratio of the total floor area of buildings on a certain location
to the size of the land of that location. Since the FSI has been increased
to four, it is worthwhile for a developer to construct houses for rental
housing. Increase in FSI effectively increases the space available, bringing
down the cost of construction per unit.

Says Vakil: "It should not end up like vertical slums." Proper emphasis on
the development of infrastructure may solve the problem.

http://business.rediff.com/special/2009/jun/24/perfin-mumbai-steps-into-rental-housing.htm

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