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Kyiv Post quest: An apartment for only $35,000

21 January, 22:36 | Oksana Faryna, Kyiv Post Staff Writer
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Renters, buyers finding market to their liking

Inspired by a long-awaited drop in real estate prices, the Kyiv Post decided to go on a quest to find the cheapest apartment in Kyiv this month. The price of $35,000 for a single-room flat sounded like nonsense last autumn, but it does not surprise real estate agents any longer.

Not only has the market yet to hit bottom, discounts are coming fast and hard.

Prices quoted in a print copy of Aviso, the major real estate and classifieds weekly in Kyiv, become outdated quickly. The most current prices can be found on one of Kyiv’s many real estate websites, like, www.realt.ua. The same properties there can be thousands of dollars cheaper than in Aviso.

There are a few flats listed for $35,000, but some of them have serious drawbacks: One had no kitchen; another had a communal kitchen shared by several families.

Hoping to bargain the listed price down, the Kyiv Post picked out several options for viewing.

The first one was a 22-square-meter place for $35,000 on 11A Shepeleva Street in Solomyanskiy district. The second one was an even smaller, but slightly better located, 20-square-meter flat on 4 Pryladniy lane in Svyatoshinskiy district. The asking price was $38,000. The third choice sounded like the best option available: 30 square meters for $37,000 on 3 Holosiyivska Street in Holosiyivskiy district.

The first option has its advantages, the real estate agent said. “This house was built for Metrobud [municipal metro construction company] workers. That’s why it’s got very good heating,” the Blahovest real estate agent said, pointing to a nine-storied brick building. It’s a 10-minute minibus ride from Shulyavska metro station, and then a five-minute walk.  The walk is pleasant and takes you through a park where you can spot squirrels climbing trees.

The entrance is a typical metal door with a digital combination lock on it. A strong smell of cigarettes hits the nose as you enter the building, and walls are covered in graffiti of anarchy signs.

The flat looks neat and tidy. Nothing special, but liveable. It seems incredible, but apparently five square meters of kitchen space can fit a table, a sink, a stove, a cupboard and a fridge.

Having heard that my budget is limited to $30,000, the real estate agent says I would still have to find an extra $5,000 to cover her 5 percent brokerage fee and 2 percent payment of real estate and pension fund duty. Those add-ons are not included in the price – a nasty surprise for those who truly are looking to buy on a tight budget.

The next flat is even easier to get to. It is a three-minute ride by minibus from Akademmistechko metro station. The flat on 4 Pryladniy lane is a former dormitory, so one should not expect much. The entrance hall surprises with newly-painted walls and eight baby carriages standing neatly in a row. The impression is quickly spoiled by the corridors and stairwells shedding plaster, as if a bomb was recently dropped here.

The real estate agent recommends the apartment because the owners creatively redesigned it themselves. The room is green, with green curtains and a multi-level ceiling with nice lighting. The bathroom is done in red. There is no bath in it, just a shower. The small kitchen is fully outfitted, and the hall is bright yellow. It even has an Internet connection.

“It is completely enough for me and my husband, but we are expecting a baby and need a bigger flat,” the young owner explains, looking over her stylish and cozy flat. Finally, she drops the price to $35,500, but there is still an additional $2,500 that has to be paid to the broker.

The third flat sounds most promising: 30 square meters in total, with 19 meters of living space, a four-square meter kitchen in good condition, and just a 15-minute walk from Lybidska metro station. But this treasure was snapped right out of my hands. Disappointingly, the previous viewer left a down payment for this $37,000 property, and agreed to pay all additional expenses.

Apparently the cheapest flats are in great demand now, according to Mykhaylo Polyntsev, analyst at Planeta Obolon real estate agency. “But such options are very few. It is not easy to find apartments for this price. More realistic prices start from $45,000. You pay this for a more-or-less normal apartment. A flat with a good floor-plan in a new building around Poznyaky or Osokorky costs $50,000.”

Serhiy Kostetskiy, a realty specialist from SV Development real estate agency, said their database shows that, between October and December 2008, housing prices dropped by 33 percent in the secondary market, and 48 percent on the primary market [for new flats].

“A flat that used to cost $100,000 in September, nobody can sell for $40,000 now. House owners give 50 percents discounts and more,” he said. Prices on the secondary market continued to decline by about 2 percent per week this year, while the primary market has seen no deals at all.

Unable to sell, property owners have turned to other options such as renting. But the influx of new properties and other market factors have affected rent prices too.

In September, it was almost impossible to find a one-room flat for less than $550 per month. But now offerings for $200-$250 are common, Kostetskiy said, and nobody is in a hurry to grab them.

He also said only about 10 percent of property owners need money immediately and choose to sell now. The rest are waiting. “Most of them are profiteers. To sit out the crisis, they make basic upgrades and turn to the rental market. At the beginning of 2008, there were three flats per each request. Today, there are 20 flats per each person interested. That’s why prices are constantly going down.”

Most market players agree that making forecasts for the real estate market this year is equivalent to making wild guesses. Much depends on the actions of the government and the banks.

“If the state passes a good anti-crisis package of laws, protecting borrowers …and giving financial support to banks, prices will not drop by more than 30 to 40 percent,” Kostetskiy said. “But in the worst-case scenario, if nothing is done for the housing market, the further decrease in 2009 will be 50 percent.” He said prices would not rise any time soon.

So, if you’re lucky enough to have some savings in dollars, real estate agents say the best time to buy would be in the summer or autumn of 2009, when the bottom of the market is expected to be reached.

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M.  (Guest) | 30.01.2009, 00:29
The author definitely exaggerates. The prices are going down as supply goes up, but I cannot believe that a flat that costs ca. 35.000 can be in a good condition. The broker\'s 5% (depends on the agency, btw) should not be a surprise, this is an established tradition.
The descriptions of the flats were far from truth, I guess. Let us take the 1st flat in Shepeleva. I lived close to that street and it takes you there at least 15-20 min by mini bus from Shulyavska or a bit longer from Beresteyska in a time with middle density traffic jams. The park is pretty small, there have never been squirrels, only homeless dogs.

As for the price bulb, I totally agree that everything was made artificially and the crisis and currency exchange rates changes served as a catalyst.
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 26.01.2009, 11:30
how long is KivPost gonna preach this shit?.. enough already...
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 26.01.2009, 15:59
Until it sinks into the thick headed greedy Ukrainian landlords!
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 27.01.2009, 00:30
I guess with the real estate to sell, the Kyiv Post is about to be history? It seemed to be a real estate supplement wrapped around a news item.
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 25.01.2009, 20:09
Alright enough of this scam story.. how long does the press intend to \'Milk\' this foolish story?
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 24.01.2009, 12:23
I was in Ukraine 6 times for my work. I know this gluttonous, grasping, eager mentality, concerned the easy money. They see in the foreigner especially western the one who has a lot of money and whom it is necessary to swindle. The prices are crazy about rents of apartments in an environment polluted by the domestic wastes and the absence of maintenance.
The fantasy of the big profits in the property speculation is finished. The spectre of the big depression is there. The real-estate bubble is going to explode in a very corrupt country at all the levels. The speculators are going to drink in the chalice up to the dregs.
Answer  
Johan De Broyer  (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 22:59
The real estate market crashed in America and will now crash in Europe and Eastern-Europe, because a lot of people in very big financial problems now, so no money to pay their loan.

The Bank in Kyiv will not accept this, because the Bank -> no money -> no apartment, so more and more apartments on the market -> lower price -> crash.
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 22:13
While it is true that the typical westerner would not consider living in the $35K apartment the author speaks about, the point the author makes is very legitimate. As someone who is an expert in the Kiev property market, I have spoken for more than 2 years now of a very clear housing bubble in play on both rental and sell front. The rental prices, particularly daily rent was increasing an average of 3-4% per month for no reason for the last 2 years, pre crisis. We literlaly witnessed 30%-40% annual increases in rent and a blind man could have predicted that that trend was not sustainable. It is now slowly dawning on Ukrainians that the fantasy of buying real estate and flipping it for huge profit is gone. The smart ones will be the ones selling right now, as prices are still very far from their bottom. Look for 40% drop from current levels and then stabilization with normal 2-5% annual increases. Of course, as always Ukrainians will be stubborn to accept this ..
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 24.01.2009, 11:08
Everybody could see that in Kiev (and not only in Kiev, considering Eastern Europe), a housing bubble was on its way. The question is just, when will the bubble implode.
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 25.01.2009, 08:14
The smart ones would have sold last year.
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 17:44
you should know that the workers who built 90% of the buildings in soviet times where paid by the sq m of bricks laid, peel away the facade and just look at the appalling work thats hidden
Answer  
Guest99  (Guest) | 24.01.2009, 01:29
Out of interest, how are western or independent Ukrainian bricklayers paid? By the hour? By the smile?
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 24.01.2009, 20:00
Sometimes bricklayers are paid by the brick here in Canada, yes. However, the same shoddy workmanship happens here in Canada also. It wasn\'t unique to Soviet times. I once lived in a condo (owned apartment) in British Columbia that was valued at $410,000. The $670,000 condo above was full of water leaks, as was nearly every other condo in the building (about 50 condos, if I remember correctly). The contractors who had built the building were long gone, and the owners had to pay about $30,000 each for repairs. Lawyers got about half that amount before any repairs started. When the repairs were completed, the economy started to decline, and the condos fell in value.
My father once owned a condo in Ottawa. When the people in the adjoining condo walked about in their condo, the floors moved in his condo. It was freezing cold in winter, and the doors never closed properly.
If you can\'t find happiness within yourself, you won\'t find it anywhere else. Time for tea
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 25.01.2009, 13:23
the western or independent ukrainian bricklayers?!?! would be getting paid by someone that gave a f^&k about the quality is the point i think you were trying to make
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 25.01.2009, 20:15
It\'s really the corrupt contractors who don\'t build \'up to standard\' who are the problem. I wouldn\'t
blame the bricklayers. Typically there\'s a rush to get the job done, to keep costs low and profits
high, and all before the banks call in their loans. The same thing happens in road and bridge
construction. About 6 people have been killed in Quebec in the last 2-3 years by falling highway bridges and falling ceilngs in underground parking garages. Investigations showed shoddy (bad)
construction and poor oversight (government inspectors) 30+ years before. They didn\'t do the inspections. Bribery is not suspected. Just poor human capital.
Guest  (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 17:41
35k is overpriced for ANY hovel ANYWHERE in ex soviet countries the construction quality is appalling and frankly you put your life at risk living in these apartments, irrespective of the standard of remont
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 14:30
I mean to say $1000 per month. No pets of course.
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 14:22
\"
almost impossible to find a one-room flat for less than $550 per month.
\"

Wow, Kiev is still expensive for the capital of a 3rd world coutntry. Here in Los Angeles, you can get a 1 room apartmetn with kitchen, living room, bathroom, plus air conditioning, heating, for $1000 in a good neighborhood and the excellent weather of California.

Something is amiss in Kiev, in my opinion.
Answer  
Texas Racer  (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 22:26
$1000 for a \"good\" neighborhood in California? Are you joking? Compton? Watts? Surely you are not referring to sunny Southern California?
Answer  

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  • Expert: Up to 80 percent of construction projects frozen in Kyiv  21 January, 13:31
  • Apartment rents drop sharply  20 January, 15:42
  • Housing prices in Kyiv will continue to fall in 2009  10 January, 14:44
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