Tag: Construction

  • Renaissance Tower: Tallest in Istanbul

    Renaissance Tower: Tallest in Istanbul

     

    istanbul tower 1

    This tower designed by award-winning firm FXFOWLE, the tallest on the Anatolian side of Istanbul, makes a memorable presence for the headquarters of a dynamic construction and development company. Occupying an “edge-city” context at the intersection of two major highways, the tower is completely freestanding and seen in the round. Functioning like an obelisk, it marks the end of long vistas and announces the entrance to the city from the east.

    This tower marries sculptural massing rooted in locale, a solar responsive skin with allusions to Islamic tradition, and the incorporation of green spaces throughout. Rooted in the particular spirit of Istanbul, it offers an antidote to the universal application of conventions that has regrettably become the norm for many international practices.

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  • Turkey to Rebuild 40% of Homes for $400 Billion, Milliyet Says

    Turkey to Rebuild 40% of Homes for $400 Billion, Milliyet Says

    Turkey plans to rebuild 40 percent of the country’s 19 million residential homes in a 20-year project that will cost $400 billion, Environment and Urban Planning Minister Erdogan Bayraktar said, Milliyet reported.

    The government brought X-ray machines from Germany to scan all housing units in the country free of charge to determine whether they are structurally sound following the Oct. 23 earthquake in the eastern province of Van, where more than 600 people died in Turkey’s worst temblor since 1999, Bayraktar told reporters in Istanbul, according to the newspaper.

    A bill expected to be approved at the Ankara parliament in January would give building owners four months to tear down sites that the state determines to be at risk and the government will do the demolition if landlords fail to act within that period, Bayraktar was cited by Milliyet as saying.

    Landlords won’t be able sue to prevent demolition, Bayraktar said, according to the newspaper. Stakeholders in a building will have to choose to unanimously agree to rebuild, sell their shares to a majority that has support from two-thirds of owners or, failing both, turn over the property at a state- determined fair-value price to the government, which will give the land to the Housing Development Administration of Turkey for rebuilding.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said three days after the Van earthquake that the government would introduce a bill to tear down structurally unsound buildings, illegal housing and squatter homes.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Emre Peker in Ankara at [email protected]

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Louis Meixler at [email protected]

    via Turkey to Rebuild 40% of Homes for $400 Billion, Milliyet Says – Bloomberg.

  • Turkey Duns Turkmen for $1Bln

    Turkey Duns Turkmen for $1Bln

    ASHGABAT, Turkmenistan — Turkish President Abdullah Gul met with his counterpart in Turkmenistan last week for urgent talks thought to be related to $1 billion in outstanding bills owed to Turkish construction companies that have revamped the capital city.

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    Turkish companies have played a leading role in transforming this old sleepy post-Soviet backwater into a city of soaring marble-clad government offices and apartment blocks. But a report last month by risk analyst D&B said 25 Turkish firms are preparing to take legal action against Turkmenistan over the hitherto unexplained nonpayment.

    Turkish media reported that Gul’s visit is aimed at recovering the debt and heading off complaints to the International Center for Settlement of Investments Disputes, or ICSID. Several Turkish businessmen said they believed it to be the central issue of Gul’s visit, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of imperiling their investments in the tightly controlled Central Asian nation.

    Gul himself was coy on the nature of the visit, but warned what was at stake before setting out. “With my visit, we will be reviewing all aspects of our cooperation in the fields of economy, trade, energy, investments and education,” Gul said. “Turkmenistan is the country where Turkish businessmen have undertaken the largest number of projects in Central Asia,” he said, adding that Turkish companies have developed projects worth $21 billion since Turkmenistan gained independence in 1991.

    Turkey’s daily newspaper Hurriyet reported in April that the Turkmen government was refusing to pay Turkish companies $1 billion owed for building work. It also said Gul, who is known to take a close interest in Turkish investors abroad, had scheduled a trip to discuss the issue with Turkmen officials.

    Foreign companies based in Turkmenistan, run as an opaque and authoritarian fiefdom since independence, are normally highly reluctant to publicize problems with the government. Turkish builder Ickale Insaat broke ranks late last year, however, when it filed a complaint against the country with the ICSID.

    “More are to follow,” said Ozan Ickale, of the Ankara-based builder. “The Turkish companies are slowly all seeking their rights through arbitration.” He said a number of Turkish contractors have been jailed in Turkmenistan or are barred from leaving the country “for simply seeking their rights.” Ickale itself is owed over $50 million, he said. “Not only have we stopped our activities, but we were lucky to have come out of there,” he said.

    Ickale said the Turkish government has promised to help them. He said he did not know if the president was expected to discuss their grievances in Turkmenistan. Ickale said three other companies had cases pending at the ICSID.

    It is unclear what would have prompted a delay of payments by the Turkmen government, although revenues were reportedly badly hit in 2009, when Russia stopped buying the country’s gas following a pipeline explosion for which both sides denied responsibility. China has since stepped in to buy large amounts of gas, but the Turkmen government will likely face straitened financial conditions over the next few years as its borrows and spends billions on developing its large energy reserves.

    via Turkey Duns Turkmen for $1Bln | Business | The Moscow Times.

  • Turkey’s construction industry aims to grow 10 percent in 2011

    Turkey’s construction industry aims to grow 10 percent in 2011

    31 December 2010, Friday / THE ANATOLIA NEWS AGENCY, ANKARA

    Turkey’s construction industry aims to grow 10 percent in 2011, the head of a vocational association said on Friday.

    Erdal Eren, chairman of Turkey’s Contractors’ Association, said that the construction industry, which had shrunk for eight quarters but started to grow in 2010, was expected to grow 10 percent in 2011.

    “Real estate and construction industry have overcome impacts of the crisis, and we get the signals for a more regular growth next year,” Eren told the Anatolia news agency.

    Eren said he thought Turkish contractors could undertake projects in particularly Russia and Qatar as olympic games and world cup finals would be held in those countries.

    The association chairman said Turkish contractors would also try to enter Central and Western African markets.

    Eren forecast the year-end construction business volume in foreign countries would be below 20 billion USD in 2010, and over 20 billion USD for 2011.