Christie’s International Real Estate and Dutch Docklands collaborate
Floating Paradise : Christie’s International Real Estate and Dutch Docklands collaborate on worldwide development of Amillarah Private Islands.
Floating Paradise : Christie’s International Real Estate and Dutch Docklands collaborate on worldwide development of Amillarah Private Islands.
The Ocean Flower, Maldives wins 4 prestigious Asia Pacific Property awards
Dutch Docklands Joins Leading International Network of Real Estate Brokers Specializing in the Marketing and Sales of High-Value Properties
In a world plagued by climate change, pollution and urban sprawl, it’s easy to think that more towering, manmade structures of concrete and steel would do more harm to Earth than good.
Represented in more than 40 countries and with around 125 Affiliates around the Globe, the world's leading luxury real estate network Christie's International Real Estate has now awarded Affiliate status to Dutch Docklands in the Maldives.
“The Green Star will blend-in naturally with the existing surrounding islands. The green covered star-shape building symbolises Maldivians innovative route to conquer climate change,” a Dutch Docklands spokesperson said.
From sustainability to "sustain-aqua-lity". Floating developments can be Scarless developments, leaving no carbon footprint during lifetime and no physical footprint after lifespan.
Ocean Flower wordt een atol met 185 drijvende villa's, die het Nederlandse bedrijf Dutch Docklands bij de Malediven in de Indische Oceaan bouwt.
The 5 LAGOONS project was finalist at the prestigious MIPIM Awards 2013 in the category “Best Futura Mega Project”.
Nestled in the Indian Ocean between Minicoy Island and the Chagos Archipelago, the Maldives comprise a chain of 26 atolls made up of islands and reefs. Tropical weather, white sane and clear water: a popular holiday destination!
What we are about to tell you will sound like something out of a hallucinogenic trip deep into the world of fantasy!
A unique series of man-made floating islands — called the 5 Lagoons Project — will begin taking shape this fall around the Maldives, a series of almost 1,300 islands in the Indian Ocean.
n case you haven’t yet heard about it, the $500million (Dh1.8bn) golf course in the Maldives is being developed by the Dutch Docklands company, who are the industry experts in floating technology.
"This will be the first and only floating golf course in the world -- and it comes complete with spectacular ocean views on every hole!"
“We told the president of the Maldives we can transform you from climate refugees to climate innovators,” the Daily Mail quoted Dutch Docklands CEO Paul van de Camp, as saying.
IT'S enough to make golfers get that sinking feeling, but developers of this $500m luxury resort hope it will leave them starry-eyed.
Maldives plans a floating tourist paradise, including an 18-hole golf course.
For golfers who struggle to avoid the water hazards, it could be a challenging course. The Maldives has revealed plans for a radical £320m floating course, which players access by an undersea tunnel.
The Maldives will soon be home to a $520 million floating golf course on the Indian Ocean. The design should be completed by 2015, according to The Daily Mail.
The Maldivian government has started a joint venture with the architectural firm Dutch Docklands International to build the world's largest artificial floating-island project.
Plovoucí hotely, umelé ostrovy a podvodní tunely. To je budoucnost Malediv ní plochy.
If you build it - they will come. At least that's what developers must be thinking as they launch plans for the world's first floating golf course in the Maldives.
Man-made island might be the solution for the country's forecast inundation issue
The troubled World Project in Dubai, which has been riddled with problems since the global financial crisis in 2009 including rumors that the islands are sinking, may have found salvation.
You've just finished a round of golf on a floating course in the middle of the Indian Ocean. An underwater tunnel leads you to the clubhouse, where a glass elevator drops down to a main bar that doubles as a spectacular natural aquarium.
Malé - Government and Dutch Docklands sign an agreement to develop floating facilities in the Maldives