The US embassy says it is moving from Awkar to Baabda for security reasons. Construction will cost around $111 million and once begun will take between 28 and 36 months to complete.
“It was one of the only places we could find with enough space for the construction project,” said a US embassy source. “We have this new committee back in Washington [which] made new requirements for safety standards in buildings. We needed more space in order to meet those requirements.”
One Lebanon-based real estate consultant predicted that real estate prices in the “fairly shabby bit of Baabda” to which the embassy is moving would increase as a consequence while the move away from Awkar would probably have a deflationary effect on that area.
“The Baabda area to which it is moving is awful, really very lower middle class,” he said. “The shops and petrol stations and cafes reflect it. The move can only have a positive effect on the new area mainly because the Lebanese like living near Western embassies. It makes them feel good.”
He said the cost of the new plot was probably something approaching $20 million. “They’re picking up a very large site relatively cheaply,” he said. “It has multiple access routes, entry and exit options, several different ways of getting into Beirut on the Damascus road, and is quite close to the presidential area. It’s an easy place to get to and is neither Christian nor Muslim.
Raja Makarem, managing partner of RAMCO real estate advisers was more circumspect. “Nobody really knows how prices will be affected. It’s difficult to say,” he opined. “The move will definitely add confidence to the area but it’s not necessarily really going to affect the prices.” He said prices in Baabda over the last few years had been seesawing. “Sometimes there was big demand, sometimes major stagnation.” Meanwhile prices in Beirut have risen at least 20% since the beginning of the year, he said.
