Qatar
$3bn worth contracts to be awarded for World Cup City
$3bn worth contracts to be awarded for World Cup City
March 01, 2011 | 12:00 AM
Bloomberg/Doha
| A model of the proposed Al Wakrah stadium |
"Our strategy is to go for an open bid,” Chief Executive Officer Essa Mohammed Ali Kaldari said in an interview.
"We would like to give an opportunity to many companies.”
Lusail City, which will have 200,000 residents and capacity to accommodate twice that many people, is scheduled to be completed by 2019, Kaldari said. The city will include manmade islands, an entertainment district, an office park for energy companies, a golf course and five stadiums. The World Cup final will be held in a venue north of the city, the CEO said.
The largest of the projects to be awarded in the next year will be for construction of the Al Khor Highway, running along Lusail City’s western border, Kaldari said. He didn’t provide details of other contracts to be given out.
Hochtief, Germany’s biggest construction company, started a joint venture with Lusail Real Estate in May to provide planning and construction services for the new city. The company plans to bid for other contracts.
"We are interested in infrastructure projects and building projects as well,” Hochtief spokesman Bernd Puetter said in a telephone interview. "We will be bidding.”
Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund acquired a 9.1% stake in Hochtief in December. The German company is building a commercial area for Qatari developer Barwa Real Estate Co. Spain’s Actividades de Construccion & Servisios SA also said this month it controls 33.5% of Hochtief as it pursues a hostile takeover of the company.
Qatar will spend about $65bn getting ready for the World Cup, awarded to the country in December, Bank of America Merrill Lynch estimates. The country plans to double the number of hotel and apartment rooms in the country, build a new rail network, construct nine World Cup stadiums and refurbish three existing ones. Plans to build Lusail City were included in plans shown in September to inspectors from Fifa, world soccer’s governing body.
"Before, people were beginning to come to us for building permits and concept design approval. Things were going in a normal manner,” Kaldari said. "Now it’s starting to speed up because people know that they need to deliver.”
Lusail City’s infrastructure will cost about $5bn and will be finished by 2015, Kaldari said. About 75% of the city’s land has been sold to private developers, mostly from the Gulf. The companies are required to complete their projects within four years of receiving the land, Kaldari said.
Mourjan Marinas is developing the Lusail marina, and Qatar Real Estate Development Co plans to construct a 1bn riyal ($275mn) mall.
March 01, 2011 | 12:00 AM