29 Years
Home > Business & Investment > Project Delays, Deviations And Other Customer Woes

Project Delays, Deviations And Other Customer Woes

Monday, March 09, 2015
By Anuj Puri

Anuj Puri Chairman & Country Head, JLL India

Reams of newsprint have been dedicated to discussing the sufferings of consumers in the Indian real estate sector. Particularly, home buyers’ woes related to late delivery of projects, deviation of housing projects from promised quality, additional payments due to change in apartment area and inadequate protection of their rights have been well-documented. The question that invariably arises is whether the developer is at fault, or whether larger market forces beyond the control of developers are at play.

Construction Delays – By Developer Or By Approval Authority?
Technically speaking, the time consumed in obtaining all approvals adds to the total time expended in completing the project. Any approval which is needed between the launch to the actual start of construction up till handover of the apartments to the buyer will be an additional time factor. Delays here will cause cascading delays in delivering the project as per the promised time.

Before a project is officially launched in the market and offered to buyers, there are myriad approvals that a developer needs to obtain from the state and central agencies and ministries. In any business, the longer raw material is held, the higher is the holding cost – which, in addition to interest costs in case of borrowed funds, causes an increase in the overall price of the finished product.

This analogy, when extrapolated to the real estate sector, considers land as the basic raw material for real estate development, with construction materials being the variable costs. The longer a developer has to hold his land without getting any receipts through the sale of proposed apartments, the higher his project costs escalate.

This can, in fact, be a very costly proposition all around. In the current scenario, obtaining the 57-odd permissions to begin construction of a project can take as much as two years. During this time, the cost of acquisition or even just holding the land for a project rises. Builders already have to cover external and internal development charges, license costs and often charges for change of land use from various departments, which have also risen. Cost of construction has gone up by more than 50%, as well.

However, this is only one side of the picture. Many developers intentionally undertake a slower pace of construction if sales in their project are sluggish or a larger part of the project is unsold. They may have diverted a sizeable chunk of the revenue generated from pre-launch sales to another project, or utilized it to pay off a pressing bank debt. At other times, the authorities can be blamed for not granting timely projects approvals.

Project Quality And Deviations
A major concern has been the difference in the promised quality and actual delivery status of the apartment, which remains a concern for real estate buyers. A change in the apartment area after buying from the developer can occur if a change in project plan is necessitated due to a design or approval issue. A deviation of up to 10% is usually acceptable – for a higher deviation, a customer must definitely seek legal recourse. That said, project deviations can also happen because of structural deficiencies of the overall system, wherein rules are being made by the governing authorities in a reactive manner rather than on a proactive basis.

There are readily recallable examples of how abrupt changes in regulations governing real estate development can work against both developers and buyers. The revisions made in the DCR regulations in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region a couple of years ago caught the industry unawares, and added to development costs by about 15%. This included the fungible premium payable if the builder opted to take the additional 35% FSI option. These cumulatively accounted for a 20% hike in construction cost. This move has led to an increased pressure on the developers’ margin - which, in turn, resulted in price increases across most projects in MMR.

The fact that developers had to re-work their project specifications (upcoming as well as on-going unapproved projects) resulted in significant project delays. The result was an exacerbation of the cash-crunch on developers, and an outcry from their buyers.

This is not to say that developers do not tamper with overall project quality or make arbitrary changes in their project designs with a clear intent to maximize profit. By pinching off space from designated open spaces, children’s play areas, compound perimeters and guest parking areas in an originally approved plan, an unscrupulous developer can make a limited plot yield more saleable space.

Recourse For Consumers
Regardless of what causes delays or abrupt changes in project blueprints, consumers must be able to get justice. Many examples of customers obtaining favourable decisions upon approaching consumer courts exist, and the power of these forums should not be under-estimated. However, the larger and less wholesome truth is that the current legal dispensation is ill-equipped and under-regulated to offer complete consumers protection in matters related to real estate.

The Real Estate Regulation and Development Bill - long languishing on the policy drawing board and still under consideration by the government – was intended to offer vastly enhanced protection to buyers. However, after the most recent revisions to RERA, it seems that it will in fact now be less protective towards buyers. While the bill aimed at providing an alternate redressal mechanism, the new provisions are talking of no recourse to other consumer forums. This can, in fact, lead to pressure on this regulatory body in terms of an increased log of cases, though it will reduce instances of multiplicity of suits.

Consumers should be aware that a certain degree of due diligence and awareness about their rights can protect them against unscrupulous practices by developers. In the first place, due attention should be paid at the time of drafting the sale agreement. A property buyer should fully understand the contents, if necessary with the help of a lawyer, and make a clear note of what the developer has agreed to deliver.

Developer’s sales team will usually present a buyer with a readymade agreement format, and a buyer must ensure that this captures every relevant detail. If it does not, the buyer is fully entitled to ask for missing details to be included, and potential grey areas to be clarified. A copy of the final agreement must be retained under any circumstances, as this will serve as the primary evidence in a legal action filed for agreement violations.

Facebook
Tweet
COMMENTS
No Comments Posted
POST YOUR COMMENTS
Name:
Email:
Comments:
 
City news
Medical report assists cop to nab 15-year-old gir
The Dombivli police have registered a murder case
Lokadhikar Samiti Mahasangh organised a annual pr
I am a 23-year-old Muslim girl. I was circumcised
Dr. Rajan B. Bhonsle, M.D. (Bom)
Consulting Sex Therapist & Counsellor
Dr. (Mrs.) Minnu R. Bhonsle, Ph.D.
Consulting Psychotherapist & Counsellor
Astrology
Select Sun sign:
 
Aries (Mar 21 - Apr 20)
Aries (Mar 21 - Apr 20)Meetings and negotiations will go in your favor but you need to be patient and that is precisely what you may find difficult to do. You need to be extremely careful of your conduct at work and not antagonize those who matter. In matters of personal relationships you need to be more tactful when dealing with a loved one that is having a difficult time.
Tarot for Love
Select Sun sign:
 
Aries (Mar 21 - Apr 20)
Aries (Mar 21 - Apr 20)What the cards say: Time for rest Path: Be honest and sincere. Don’t justify if mistake committed Ally: Virgo will help you in facing the truth relax. Be wary of Gemini who will help you justify Card for the week: Tarot key no. XII, The Hanged Man. Time to surrender to the Divine will and accept what comes your way.
- Advertising -
Pottery, jewellery, apparels, shoes, leather bags
“The Union Budget 2015-16 aims to reduce litigati
One-two-three punch, but still the US Dollar mana
Read More