Mingtiandi

Asia real estate and outbound investment news

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter
Sign Up / Login Logout

Lost your password?
Register
Forgotten Password
Cancel

Register For This Site

A password will be e-mailed to you.

  • Capital Markets
  • Events
    • Mingtiandi 2023 Event Calendar
    • Mingtiandi APAC Residential Forum 2023
    • Mingtiandi Asia Logistics Forum 2023
    • Mingtiandi Hong Kong Focus Forum 2023
    • Mingtiandi APAC Data Centre Forum 2023
    • Mingtiandi Asia Office Strategies Forum 2023
    • Mingtiandi Singapore Focus Forum 2023
    • More Events
  • MTD TV
  • People
    • Industry Moves
    • MTD TV Speakers
  • Logistics
  • Data Centres
  • Asia Outbound
  • Retail
  • Research & Policy
  • Advertise

Chinese Developer Gets Go-Ahead for $146M Sydney Tower Project

2015/12/10 by Michael Cole Leave a Comment

City Tattersalls Club

An artist’s rendering of plans for the new tower on the club site.

ICD Property, a Chinese-owned developer based in Australia, has won approval along with a local builder for a A$200 million ($146 million) project to redevelop the site of a social club in Sydney into a 48-storey tower, incorporating condominiums and a hotel.

The project to convert the 120-year-old City Tattersalls Club at 194-204 Pitt Street is part of a flurry of new projects across Sydney, Melbourne and Perth by ICD, with at least some of these projects being backed by state-owned Chinese developer Sino-Ocean Land, according to an account in the Sydney Morning Herald.

The Sydney residential project, which could yield as many as 250 new apartments, is the latest in a series of major real estate investments by Chinese developers in the city, that have raised concerns about oversupply, particularly as Australia’s domestic economy continues to slow.

Club Gets A$96 Million for Its Downtown Site

Melbourne-based ICD and its partner, Sinclair Brook engineers, have agreed to pay the members of the social club A$96 million for the rights to build the tower project, with A$71 million of that ear-marked for construction, another A$20m to go for fitting out a new club within the tower, and A$5 million in cash for the club, according to an account in The Australian.

The new structure will include a 100-room hotel, three floors of retail and five floors of space for the new club, in addition to the 250 apartments. Earlier statements by leaders of the City Tattersalls Club indicated that construction on the new project would start in early 2017.

Chinese Emigre-Owned Developer Ventures into Sydney Market

Michael Mai ICD

Michael Mai founded ICD with the help of a family trust set up by his father, who runs a HK-listed mainland manufacturer

ICD, which is owned by emigre-Chinese entrepreneur Michael Mai, sees the new tower project as an opportunity to break into the Sydney market, after investing in developments in the Australian cities of Melbourne and Perth.

“We currently have five projects worth over $600 million under development and plan to expand our projects portfolio to over $2 billion by 2017,” Mai was quoted as saying in the Sydney Morning Herald earlier this year, when the company was still confining its deals to Melbourne.

Among ICD’s Melbourne projects is the 632-unit EQ Tower, which Sino-Ocean has also invested in. Mai has said to have been seeking the Beijing-based developer’s participation in the Sydney project as well. In addition to the Sino-Ocean relationship, ICD has also benefited from a family trust set up by Mai’s father, Mai Boliang, CEO of Hong Kong-listed mainland manufacturer, CIMC.

Even before the confirmation of the Sydney deal this week, Mai, who came to Australia for high school and university, had already moved beyond Mellbourne to take up a 75 percent stake in a A$670 million mixed-use project in Perth, in Western Australia. The six-year old company has also picked up another Melbourne project in the meantime.

ICD the Latest to Bet on Sydney

In Sydney, ICD will find many Chinese neighbors among the city’s construction projects, particularly for condo developments.

Among the biggest Chinese-backed projects in Sydney is Dalian Wanda’s Syndey One, which the developer is building at the site of Gold Fields House in Sydney, after acquiring the project last year for A$425 million.

Shimao Property, run by Australian-based Chinese tycoon Hui Wing Mao, has two projects in the city already, and another Chinese-owned local Australian developer, Vision Investment Group, also has condo projects underway in Sydney.

While all of these Chinese projects are underway in Sydney, the market for new homes appears to be cooling.

During November, the clearance rate for new homes at auction in the city fell below 60 percent for three straight weeks, according to figures from market information provider CoreLogic RP Data. Those results are down from an average of over 71 percent a year ago. Many analysts believe that parts of Sydney are already oversupplied.

Share this now

  • LinkedIn
  • Share
  • Tweet
  • Email

Filed Under: Outbound Investment Tagged With: Australia, crebrief, ICD Property, Michael Mai, Sino-Ocean, Sydney

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get Mingtiandi Delivered

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

MTD TV

mtd tv debt panel
Developer Crisis Creates Opportunities For Credit Investors: MTD TV
Forest, ALP, C&W, Yardi See Warehouse Technologies Becoming the Norm: MTD TV

More MTD TV Videos>>

People in the News

Michael Smith Hongkong Land
Hongkong Land Names Mapletree’s Smith Chief Executive as Office Slump Continues
Cheng Kar-Shun, NWD
New World’s Henry Cheng Says Searching for Successor, May Opt for External Candidate
Rahul Pandit
Blackstone in Need of New CEO for India Industrial Platform as Rahul Pandit Departs
sanjiv-aggarwal- Actis
Asia Real Estate People in the News 2023-11-20

More Industry Professionals>>

People in the News

Hongkong Land Names Mapletree’s Smith Chief Executive as Office Slump Continues

Michael Smith Hongkong Land

The biggest landlord in Hong Kong’s Central district is headed to a second straight year of declining profits and the … Read More>>

New World’s Henry Cheng Says Searching for Successor, May Opt for External Candidate

Cheng Kar-Shun, NWD

Hong Kong property and retail tycoon Henry Cheng Kar-shun says he is still looking for a successor to run the family’s … Read More>>

Blackstone in Need of New CEO for India Industrial Platform as Rahul Pandit Departs

Rahul Pandit

Having established a portfolio of 17 industrial developments across eight major markets in India, Blackstone is looking … Read More>>

Asia Real Estate People in the News 2023-11-20

sanjiv-aggarwal- Actis

India’s de facto sovereign fund leads this week’s review of personnel moves from around the region with news reports … Read More>>

More Industry Professionals>>

Latest Stories

Norito Ikeda president Japan Post Bank
Japan Post Bank Boosts Real Estate Holdings to $27B as Diversification Continues
Evergrande Real Estate Group Chairman of the Board Hui Ka-yan attends Evergrande Real Estate result announcement at the JW Marriott in Admiralty. 29MAR16 SCMP/ Nora Tam
Receivers Take Over Hong Kong Mansions From Entities Linked to Evergrande Boss
China’s Wanda Delaying $600 million Bond Payment
China’s Wanda Delaying $600M Bond Payment and More Asia Real Estate Headlines

Sponsored Features

Macquarie Asset Management Confident in Continuing Rise of APAC Logistics
Asia Pacific a Dominant Source of Global Capital
Crystal Investment and SOCAM Form Proptech VC Firm

More Sponsored Features>>

Connect with Mingtiandi

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Real Estate News

  • Capital Markets
  • 2023 Event Calendar
  • MTD TV Archives
  • People
  • Logistics
  • Data Centres
  • Asia Outbound
  • Retail

More Mingtiandi

  • About Mingtiandi
  • Contact Mingtiandi
  • Mingtiandi Membership
  • Newsletter Subscription
  • Advertise
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Join the Mingtiandi Team


© 2007-2023 China Advertising Media Ltd (Samoa). All rights reserved.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.