After Paris and Prague, now is the time of the Hungarian town. Where to buy a house more and more Italians. Waiting for the real estate boom
Occasionally romantic city to visit, vibrant. City where you can imagine a future promise, and not yet consumed. It may happen then, and often in recent years, dreaming of a safe but profitable investment, as property, but the cost per square meter in Italian cities are the prerogative of a few. And then the dream can lead to Outside In Budapest, for example. Although difficult
to quantify in practice (because the roads are many and varied to buy) to that of real estate agents working on the ground are hundreds of Italians who have opted in recent months to buy a house in the old Paris of the East. For his past as imperial capital, for its Baroque architecture in the hills of Buda or the Art Nouveau atmosphere of the narrow streets of Pest. "And then the traffic is still human, highly efficient public transportation and keep a kindness that the people in our great city was lost," said Adolfo Stella, clerk of Rome. "The cars meet the lanes, he smiles a lot. I'm seriously thinking of moving."
And then the coffee, the artistic life e notturna si sono adeguati in un attimo all'ingresso in Europa, e senza conoscere l'impennata dei prezzi. Che restano abbordabili, anzi, abbordabilissimi. Immobili compresi. "Appena ho avuto la possibilità ho comprato due appartamenti in pieno centro storico: 40 metri quadrati, 40 mila euro ciascuno. Altro che i prezzi di via del Corso, dove oggi si arriva a 10 mila euro al metro", gongola Stella. "La cosa che rimpiango, però, è di non averlo fatto prima, dopo il crollo del Muro: all'inizio degli anni Novanta una casa di media grandezza costava al massimo 10, 20 milioni di lire. L'avevo intuito già allora che con l'ingresso nell'Unione Europea si sarebbe ben presto raggiunto un tenore di vita simile al nostro. E ora che l'euro is nearby (presumably in 2011, ed), if the process is similar to what we saw in Italy, the prices go crazy. "
For now roam, to the palaces of the eighteenth century's oldest and most prestigious Buda, between 2700-3800 € per square meter. A Pest, the lower town, most of twentieth-century mark, ranging from 3000 to just 700, as one moves away from the Danube.
analysis Alex Benedetti, a board member of the CEPI (the association bringing together real estate brokers and managers of European Union countries), confirms that stories like those of Star, there are many. "The purchase of properties in the city by foreign private is a recent development, and involves many Italians. The reason is simple: investors expect the revaluation due to economic growth in Hungary, which proceeds at a pace much higher than most of Western Europe: in 2006 we expect a rate of 4 to 4.5% against 1, 5% in Italy. "The phenomenon also affects other Eastern capitals," Vilnius, Riga, Tallinn, Warsaw, Krakow and Bratislava: they are all under assault. Prague is actually the first to be "discovered", since the early nineties. But Budapest is now the future, "sums up Benedetti." The fact is that in Western Europe, as in the U.S. after years in which the market has exploded suddenly, expected the crisis. So many small investors point to the east, where the vicious cycle has yet to begin. "
[DWeb extracted from the Republic of the women]
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