– by Akash Pharande, Managing Director – Pharande Spaces
Undoubtedly, urban flooding, especially in a country like India, which sees annual monsoons, can have serious economic consequences. These consequences are completely apart from the inconveniences and frayed tempers caused by pothole-raddled, awash streets. For example, excessive rains ruin crops – a serious matter in agriculture-driven nations where food prices are dictated by availability.
Flooding can destroy or severely damage assets like automobiles, public utilities, and electrical grids, lead to excessive air pollution due to crawling traffic, and cause other economic losses. And they can destroy homes in low-lying areas. When water levels rise too high, the can damage the structural integrity of properties in the fallout zone. Rising water levels also cause structural damage to properties within the immediate flooding influence zone.
But does flooding also impact the price of housing in urban India? Let’s take a look.
Logic Vs Reality
Much depends on the severity of the flooding in a particular area. In most Indian cities, occasionally submerged streets or compounds are accepted as facts of life. In many cases, the reason is merely negligence on the part of the local municipality to clear astron drains in time.
But if water levels regularly rise to the floor levels of surrounding housing projects, there is a bigger problem. The area is either naturally (geographically) prone to flooding or has been made prone to flooding by overbuilding and filling up natural water escape routes with concrete structures.
Central Areas Most Affected
These areas are vanity pin codes and demand for housing does not appear to be severely affected by instances of flooding. Even less expensive areas of a city may not see demand reduce because of flooding, because the need for accommodation there is driven by nearby or connected workplace hubs.
In the case of the heavy floods in Chennai in 2015, real estate development barely paused before the fundamental need for homes in the city caused housing demand to resurge. Chennai again saw floods last year – but according to real estate consultants, the real estate market there still grew by over 60%.
In Bengaluru, several areas in and around the main IT hotspots were recently ravaged by flooding. However, this has not caused property prices or rentals to drop as people employed in the IT tech parks have little option but to live close to them.
In Pune, too, flooding has, in most cases, had no significant impact on housing prices. The flooding of Pune’s Mutha river has direct implications for several low-lying or overly-developed areas – including some of the most aspirational ones which regularly draw the richest Puneris.
The Mula river, which is also flood-prone during excessive monsoon spells, regularly overflows into other areas – including some high-profile locations which benefit from the Hinjawadi IT Park. Likewise, many locations in the Pimpri-Chinchwad area are threatened by flooding of the Pavana river, which passes through it. Nevertheless, housing demand continues strong in most of these areas.
Logically, property prices should be tied not only to the land rates in an area but also to how liveable it is. However, on the ground, housing prices will not reduce as long as there is sufficient demand in any given location – flood-prone or not. Housing prices in a location are inextricably tied to the prevailing demand for homes there. This is an immutable fact of the Indian housing market.
Homebuyers should do their homework about several aspects of a project and location, including proneness to floods. They should certainly not be influenced by the snob quotient of an address when it is known that the area gets flooded regularly. Good housing is about liveability.
It is generally advisable to avoid buying homes in smaller projects fitted into a minuscule plot in a densely populated area. Developers of such projects have only chosen the plot for one reason – to leverage the central location appeal and the higher property prices. Such projects do not benefit from adequate planning at the municipal or developer level.
The Integrated Township Advantage
What you buy today is what you will still have decades later, no matter what happens in the rest of the city.
Large townships cover huge areas which, if adequately planned and duly approved by the development authorities, present no danger of floods anywhere within the project’s massive perimeter. Moreover, large integrated townships in Pune and other major cities are privately run and therefore not subject to negligent municipal services.
When a developer builds a township, homes there are sold over a span of several years. Any instance of flooding due to deficient services will impact future sales. Thus, township developers are highly invested in ensuring that flooding or similar issues are never associated with the project.
These inherent qualities of integrated townships are the biggest assurance against the devastation of flooding, now or in the future.
Geographical Flaws Are Permanent
In cities vulnerable to flooding, homebuying decisions should not be made merely on the basis of housing prices or snob appeal. Some of the most popular areas in our cities are prone to flooding. Homes must be bought with sufficient hindsight (what happened before), foresight (is it likely to happen again), and a firm understanding of what constitutes safety and a dependable lifestyle in a constantly changing environment.
Akash Pharande is Managing Director – Pharande Spaces, a leading real estate construction and development firm famous for its township projects in West Pune and beyond. Pharande Promoters & Builders, the flagship company of Pharande Spaces and an ISO 9001-2000 certified company, is a pioneer of townships in West Pune.
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