A new year means new opportunities, and we welcome 2012 with a fresh look at 10 Buenos Aires neighborhoods where you may get more bang for your buck, pound or real. The slideshow above is a compilation of InvestBA recommendations, several of which appeared in the new Luxury Latin America article, along with recommendations made in a BA barrio-value-centric analysis today in Cronista. (Full Story in Spanish)

For more information about Buenos Aires real estate opportunities, download the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

InvestBA Privada Primavera Issue

Private vineyards, tech incubators, road races and polo legends all featured in the new issue of Privada.

Today marks the first day of spring in the Southern Cone, so we’re celebrating with the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

The Primavera 2011 issue is a whirlwind journey from artist galleries and road races in Buenos Aires to private vineyards in Mendoza to real estate in Punta del Este and sunsets in Jose Ignacio.

Spring means creativity is blooming, so we’ll tour the new Buenos Aires Tech District, travel to San Rafael for the Grand Opening of a Hollywood Burger franchise, check out the new wave of condo-hotels in Argentina and find out what A-list celebrities are buying vineyards in the Uco Valley.

Spring also means polo in Buenos Aires, and we preview the three jewels of the Triple Crown, look under the hood of the new Audi La Dolfina Q7 and count down the Top 10 polo players in the world including Argentines Pablo Mac Donough, Facundo Pieres and Adolfo Cambiaso. After a few chukkers, we’ll check-in for sunset at the Estancia Vik and find out how a luxury hotel and modern art merge to create a 4,000 acre shrine to the best of Uruguay.

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Distrito Audiovisual en Buenos Aires

The A/V District is one of four "polos" transforming BA into a net exporter of creative services.

When most foreign travelers and investors think of Polo in Buenos Aires, it conjures up images of Cambiaso and Palermo, high-goals and Hurlingham or Ellerstina v. La Dolfina. But the new wave of “polo” being embraced by the City of Buenos Aires is slowly changing the landscape of Capital Federal and transforming the city into a net exporter of creative services.

Under the direction of the Ministry of Economic Development, the four main “polos” or centers of attraction in Buenos Aires are the emerging Arts District in Barracas based in the Metropolitan Design Center, the Tech District in Parque Patricios, the Audiovisual District in Palermo Hollywood and the Pharmaceutical District in the south. The Districts are spaces where companies and academia come together for innovation and production while blending with the cultural identity of the surrounding barrios.

Yesterday we were pleased to meet with Ana Aizenberg of the Buenos Aires Film Commission and Florencia Stivelmaher, Operations Director of Creative Industries. They explained to us the emerging footprint of the Audiovisual District which will eventually encompasses 1,700 acres and ultimately generate 63,000 jobs in the film and television sector. The A/V polo is already serving as a magnet for international production companies from the U.S., France and the Netherlands to name a few.

By spreading the polos around Capital Federal, the City of Buenos Aires seeks to improve the economic, social and urban development of some historically-overlooked BA barrios. For a closer look at the polos, their footprints and job creation forecasts, click here.

Rosario Tech District

City leaders envision over 100 tech-PYMEs and university research groups working in the AITR.

The beautiful City of Rosario will take another important step on its path toward economic diversification this year with the creation of the Rosario Industrial Technology Area, or AITR in Spanish. According to Agenciafe, the idea for the Tech District was conceived during the strategic planning phase of the Rosario Metropolitan Plan. That plan envisions no fewer than 100 small and medium-size business (PYMEs) clustered in the new Tech District.

Software, hardware, multimedia design, biotech and audiovisual production companies will all be courted with a combination of low interest loans and assorted tax incentives for relocation and expansion. The model has proven successful in other Argentine cities like Mendoza, San Luis and Buenos Aires where the GCBA has already attracted more than 70 companies to Parque Patricios with 130 tech-PYMEs anticipated by year-end 2011.

Sebastián Chale, Rosario’s Secretary of Production & Local Development, says the District “is an opportunity to give the city some excellent infrastructure, to promote economic development and create high-paying jobs.” He went on to describe the first phase of the project. “Those of us who have been working on this plan for the past seven months anticipate a budget of 10 million pesos (US$2.48 million) for an intelligent building that will house between 12 and 25 companies, roughly 150,000 square feet of high-tech companies, postgraduate classrooms and research centers tied to the universities.” (Full Story in Spanish)

For more information about IT opportunities in Argentina, visit our archives and download the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

Buenos Aires Real Estate Price Change by Neighborhood

With two exceptions, BA barrios posting the biggest gains were in the extreme north and south.

A new analysis of real estate price variations for 2009-2010 shows the greatest year-over-year increases in Palermo and Liniers (20 to 25%) followed by 15 to 20% gains in Belgrano, Nunez, Paternal and four southern Capital Federal neighborhoods benefiting from increased business and infrastructure investment from the City of Buenos Aires: Barracas, Constitucion, Nueva Pompeya and Parque Patricios.

Barracas is home to the new Metropolitan Design Center and Parque Patricios is the site of the BA Tech District where an estimated 130 IT companies will be operating by year’s end. The only three BA barrios posting YOY decreases were Colegiales, Recoleta and Retiro.

The data are based on a study of existing apartments in Capital Federal, and according to Clari­n the average increase in price per square foot citywide was 7.74%, although the variations by barrio ranged from annual decreases of 5% to annual increases of almost 25%.

The majority of neighborhoods (30 of 47) like Boedo, Chacarita, La Boca, and San Telmo fell in the 10 to 15% increase category. Clarín also notes the average gap between highest and lowest price per square foot in individual barrios widened to 53% with Almagro, Caballito, Palermo and Retiro showing the greatest variation between minimum and maximum price per square foot.

Brokers surveyed anticipate demand for new units in 2011 will be strongest from investors and existing homeowners looking to trade up, as mortgages remain out-of-reach for first-time homebuyers in Buenos Aires and Argentina in general. (Full Story in Spanish)

For more information about Buenos Aires real estate opportunities, download the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

 

Bariloche

Mendoza

Uruguay

© 2011 InvestBA.com