Property development promotes green living in urban areas


The development of the property sector along with rising income are promoting residents in urban areas to pay more attention to their health and quality of their living environment.

The model of Green Bay Village. — Photos BIM Group

HA NOI (Biz Hub) — The development of the property sector along with rising income are promoting residents in urban areas to pay more attention to their health and quality of their living environment.

Many property developers have in recent years built modern residential areas with more green spaces to catch up with the thirst for green living by city-dwellers, offering environmentally friendly living environments as an escape from the busy and dusty downtown.

This helped explain while new urban areas and gated communities such as Ciputra, The Manor in Ha Noi or Phu My Hung in HCM City were attracting such attention as these projects met the demands of high-income city-dwellers.

BIM Group, one of the leading property developers in Viet Nam, recently brought the model of the gated community to northern Quang Ninh Province's Ha Long City with the debut of Green Bay Village early this month in the hope of optimising the quality of living standards.

Doan Quoc Huy, deputy chairman of BIM Group, said that the development of residential projects with high living standards in Ha Long City was essential, given the tourism city's rapid economic growth and growing population.

Located in Halong Marina New Urban Area, Green Bay Village offered 144 modern townhouses that would an ideal living environment, the developer said.

Green Bay Village was expected to be developed into the most civilised gated community in Ha Long with a focus on developing green spaces to ensure clean air, in addition to round-the-clock security and modern amenities.

"BIM Group is striving to create a standard living environment and conditions for residents to shape a healthy lifestyle, in the belief that green living spaces would help reduce stress and risks of diseases while improve productivity," Huy said. — VNS

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