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In 2018, Housing Minister Majid Al-Hogail handed over the first house built in 48 hours to its owner using a 3D-printed building technology. [8] [9] The housing sector investment in 2019 is expected to reach $21.33 billion according to the housing minister to provide affordable housing units. [10] [11]
Lourdes Guerrero, who owns a home in the greater Los Angeles area, reportedly saw her house listed on a Craigslist ad -- that was posted by a stranger. Woman finds her own house for rent on Craigslist
The New Riyadh) [1] and the Red Sea neighborhood, [2] is a commercial and residential neighborhood in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and the seat of the homonymous sub-municipality of al-Malaz. Named after the al-Malaz Square (now King Abdullah Park), it was built in the 1950s by King Saud bin Abdulaziz as a housing project for government employees and ...
Al-Khalidiah (Arabic: حي الخالدية, romanized: ḥaī al-Khālidīyah) is a low-income residential neighborhood in southeastern Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, located south of as-Sinaiyah and west of al-Faisaliyyah in the sub-municipality of al-Batʼha. [1] It emerged as an offshoot of Hillat al-Anouz (Arabic: حلة العنوز, lit.
The Mukaab (Arabic: المكعّب, romanized: mukaʻʻab, lit. 'cube', ) is a proposed architectural project to build a 400-meter (1,300 ft) tall cube-shaped skyscraper in the al-Qirawan district of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, one of the five neighborhoods of the planned real estate development of New Murabba.
A landlord is the owner of a house, apartment, condominium, land, or real estate which is rented or leased to an individual or business, who is called a tenant (also a lessee or renter). When a juristic person is in this position, the term landlord is used. Other terms include lessor and owner. The term landlady may be used for the female owners.
Al-Olaya (Arabic: العليا, romanized: al-ʿulāyā), alternatively transliterated as al-Ulaya, is the central business district of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, located mostly in the sub-municipality of its namesake, al-Ulaya, and partially in al-Malaz and al-Ma'dher.
As of 2005, more than 500,000 people lived in the area. [3] As of that year, many middle-income Saudis lived in Al-Suwaidi. [2] Many people migrating from the rural areas went to Al-Suwaidi during the "oil boom" in the 1970s and early 1980s. [2]