New Urban Communities Authority

The New Urban Communities Authority (Arabic: هيئة المجتمعات العمرانية الجديدة) is an Egyptian state owned enterprise (SOE) established in 1979 and affiliated to the Ministry of Housing.[1] It is the exclusive satellite city developer in Egypt, in addition to being Egypt's largest real estate developer and constructor of residential units.[2] These activities resulted in revenue of LE 57bn in FY 2019/2020, making it the third largest SOE after petroleum and the Suez Canal.[2]

New Urban Communities Authority
هيئة المجتمعات العمرانية الجديدة

NUCA headquarters, in Sheikh Zayed City.
Agency overview
Formed1979
JurisdictionGovernment of Egypt
HeadquartersSheikh Zayed City, Egypt
Agency executives
  • Abdel-Muttalib Mamdouh, Vice President
  • Engineer Gamal Talaat, Assistant Vice President
Parent AgencyMinistry of Housing
Websitewww.nuca.gov.eg
www.newcities.gov.eg

NUCA was originally tasked with addressing housing issues in Egypt by developing new urban communities to redistribute the population of existing cities away from Egypt's Nile valley and delta, and into the desert in order to save agricultural land from being urbanized.[1] But after four decades of working under a strict policy of desert development, NUCA's mandate was modified in 2018 allowing it to develop land and real estate projects on agricultural land and within existing cities.[3]

Since 1979, NUCA's main role is master developer of the 2.3 million feddans (acres) of state-owned land assigned to it over the years, subdividing it and laying trunk infrastructure, as well as constructing water and wastewater treatment plants, buildings for public schools, hospitals and government agencies. Through its city development agencies (jihaz tanmiyat al-madina), it sells land parcels to individuals and real estate developers for residential and other purposes.[4]

NUCA is also the regulator of the new urban communities under its jurisdiction. Its chairman, the Minister of Housing, Utilities and Urban Communities issues planning permits and oversees the communities, while the appointed city agency heads issue building permits and run the day-to-day affairs of functioning towns, as the new urban communities do not fall under regular local administration.[5] Its headquarters are in Sheikh Zayed City in Greater Cairo.

New communities edit

Over the course of forty years, NUCA built 20 new towns and satellite cities across Egypt. Since 2014, it started planning a new batch of 37 fourth-generation towns cities spread over around 167,000 feddans of land, where by 2021 17 were under construction.[6]

First Generation 1977–1982 10th of Ramadan - New Borg El Arab - 15th of May - New Damietta - 6th of OctoberNew Salhia - Sadat
Second Generation 1982–2000 New Cairo - Sheikh Zayed City - BadrObourNew Beni SuefNew Minya - New NubariyaEl Shorouk
Third Generation 2000–2014 New AsyutNew TibaNew SohagNew AswanNew Qena - New FaiyumNew Akhmim
Fourth Generation 2014- Under construction: New Administrative CapitalNew AlameinNew Mansoura – New Toshka – New Farafra – East Port Said, Strategic plans: Suez, New Rosetta, and New Beni Mazar, under planning: New Gerga, New Esna, and New Hurghada

New Communities not under NUCA's administration:

New Galala City

Real estate developer edit

In addition to its city developer role, NUCA acts as a real estate developer where it has recently built and sold over 77,000 for profit housing units such as the Sakan Masr and Dar Masr and Janna projects across Egypt, as well as skyscrapers in Maspero, the New Administrative Capital, and New Alamein.[2] According to a NUCA executive, they account for 28% of its income.[7]

In addition to its in-house real estate development, NUCA, along with the Housing and Development Bank which it controls, owns a number of real estate developers:[8]

  • City Edge Developments (84%)
  • Hyde Park Developments (78%)
  • Saudi Egyptian Developers (50%)
  • Administrative Capital for Urban Development - ACUD (The city developer of the New Administrative Capital, 49%)

References edit

  1. ^ a b "About the Authority". newcities.gov.eg.
  2. ^ a b c "Estimating the Size of Public Sector Real Estate in Egypt". Built Environment Observatory. 18 April 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
  3. ^ "Law 1/2018". Court of Cassation. 2018. Archived from the original on 22 December 2022. Retrieved 22 December 2022.
  4. ^ "Law 59/1979 (including amendments thru 2018)". The Official Gazette. 2018.
  5. ^ "The New Urban Communities Authority - Tadamun". Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  6. ^ "Building Egypt's 4G cities". Ahramonline. 29 June 2021. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
  7. ^ "76 مليار جنيه إيرادات مستهدفة للمجتمعات العمرانية العام الحالي". جريدة حابي (in Arabic). 26 August 2020. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
  8. ^ "Estimating the Size of Public Sector Real Estate in Egypt". Built Environment Observatory. 18 April 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2024.

External links edit