Politics and policy
By KIARIE NJOROGE, gkiarie@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The Lands, Housing and Urban Development ministry on Wednesday invited local and international investors to build the units in the first phase of the government home ownership scheme to be executed under a public-private partnership (PPP).
Private investors will put up 10,000 housing units in
Nairobi’s Park Road, Shauri Moyo and Starehe in the next three years as
the State moves to implement its grand plan to house workers.
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The Lands, Housing and Urban Development ministry on
Wednesday invited local and international investors to build the units
in the first phase of the government home ownership scheme to be
executed under a public-private partnership (PPP).
Under the scheme, the State will provide land in
the three estates while the successful applicants will put up the
low-cost houses for civil servants.
“The projects shall comprise financing, design,
construction and management of housing units and associated amenities,”
the ministry said in a public notice.
Once complete, the units will be occupied by
low-cadre civil servants who will repay the loans in installments of
between Sh2,000 and Sh4,000 per month and get titles upon completion.
“It is expected the construction will take about
three years while operations and transfers may take a minimum ten
years,” the ministry said.
In April, Lands principal secretary Mariamu El
Maawy said the workers, who include clerks, secretaries and office
assistants, will be able to own the houses in about 15 years. This
implies that the government employees will pay about Sh800,000 for each
of the units.
Under the scheme, workers will pay a 10 per cent
deposit and monthly repayments over a period of 18 years or until they
retire at 60 years, or whichever comes first.
In Starehe, 6,400 units will be built on 20 acres;
2,000 units will be built in 11.5 acres in Shauri Moyo and in Park Road,
1,600 units will be put up on nine acres.
These will mark the first phase of the 300,000
housing units plan that the State plans to build in Nairobi, Mombasa,
Kisumu and Nyeri.
The developments will be a departure from the past
where the government has focused on housing for civil servants above job
group K.
In 2012, the State offered two and three bedroom
apartments valued at Sh3.2 million and Sh4.2 million respectively, which
required civil servants to make a minimum monthly payment of Sh20,247.
The high cost technically locked out workers earning less than Sh58,000
per month.
Applicants for the contracts will be allowed to bid
for one or all three housing projects. The multi-billion projects are
expected to open another front for fierce competition between local and
international investors in the real estate sector.
International companies, which can access cheap
credit from their home countries, have been snapping up real estate
deals prompting the National Construction Authority to propose
ring-fencing public projects below Sh5 billion for local institutions.
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