A new blueprint for the long-delayed
Snake Island (Koh Pos) resort development off the coast of Sihanoukville
will soon be completed, and investment of up to $1 billion is hoped to
kick-start the project, which has a planned completion date of 2018,
according to the developer.
Kheam Kolneath, public relations manager
of the Koh Pous (Cambodia) Investment Group (KPIG), said recently that
the group’s director was overseeing the finalisation of a revised resort
blueprint with an architect from US-based Interstate Hotels and
Resorts.
According to KPIG’s website, the group
has entered into a long-term strategic development agreement, with
Interstate acting as the island resort’s property manager.
Plans to redesign the blueprint for the
116-hectare luxury residential and resort complex come amid poor sales
and a host of other setbacks.
In 2006, the Cambodian government signed
a 99-year lease for the land on Koh Pos – also known as Morakot Island –
to Russian KPIG.
The Post reported late last year that
the company had already invested $100 million on a 1-kilometre bridge to
the island, as well as other infrastructure, including an unfinished
5-kilometre road circling the island.
According to Kolneath, the blueprint is
not yet complete, with the group director seeking changes to some
aspects of the design from Interstate before an official launch and a
proposal aimed at gaining permission to initiate the new project from
the Council for the Development of Cambodia.
KPIG’s director has said that the new plan will increase the project budget from $276 million to $1 billion.
“I think the blueprint will be finished
by the middle of this year because the director wants to push project
ahead after it was put on hold following the 2008 financial crisis,”
Kolneath said. “The project originally had a planned completion date of
2016, but it has now been delayed to 2018.”
The project comprises two 4-star hotels,
one 5-star hotel, one “6-star” hotel, a casino, bungalows, villas for
private residents, and further infrastructure to serve the resort, he
said.
Kolneath added that the group had
already spent $100 million so far on island infrastructure, including
the bridge and the perimeter road.
“Construction of 20 villas is under way,
but progress is slow,” Kolneath said, who suggested that off-plan sales
had been deterred by the high price tags of $1.5 to $1.6 million.
According to Noun Rithy, general manager
of Bunna Realty Group, even if the group changed the development plan,
the resort development needs to have specific goals and a strategy. He
said that construction delays had led to a loss of confidence, and that
the developer would need to show strong commitment to win back market
confidence.
Comparing Kho Pos and Ko Pich – better
known as Diamond Island – in Phnom Penh, Rithy noted that Koh Pich is
open for people to visit, but Koh Pos is closed to the public despite
the construction of the bridge, making for a lost marketing opportunity.
Koh Pos covers a large area, and if the
owner leased some parts of the island to short-term investors they could
generate income, which would be better than leaving the island
deserted, Rithy said.
Sourced: The Phnom Penh Post
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