Good day. Today i will show you 3 bedroom townhouse in Canal Cove Villas project on Palm Jumeirah Dubai. In this video i will make video tour and will tell you about Canal Cove Project and townhouse itself.
Villa details:
Size: 4000 sq.ft.(372 sq.mt.)
View: Full sea view
Location: Corner Plot
Location map: https://goo.gl/maps/FdhHWSMdcraykhEz6
You can support this project with ETH or BTC. Wallets are below:
ETH Wallet: 0x5D80adf0060C2f0b4DA72616CF6202c776225827
BTC Wallet: 3C1HNYr9XQ7tNKioFeiLhFro9LJdWtZQ2G
For a confidential viewing and presentation, please call:
Mobile/Whatsapp: 00971 50 892 8199 (Russian/English speaking)
Or email:
[email protected]There are three villas/townhouse types on Palm Jumeirah's fronds developed by Nakheel: Signature Villas, Garden Homes and Canal Cove. Canal Coves are 3 & 4 bedroom townhouses located at the 'entrance' of every frond. These townhouses are in clusters of 6 up-to 12 units depending on the frond and are built around a small park which is shared by the homes. Canal Coves are among the most expensive town-homes one can purchase in Dubai.
The Palm Jumeirah (Arabic: نخلة الجميرة) is an artificial archipelago in the United Arab Emirates, created using land reclamation by Nakheel which extends into the Persian Gulf. It is part of a larger series of developments called the Palm Islands, including Palm Jebel Ali and Palm Deira, which, when completed, will together increase Dubai's shoreline by a total of 520 kilometres (320 mi).[1] It has an estimated population of 10,500 as of 2016. It is located on the Jumeirah coastal area of the emirate of Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates.
Palm Jumeirah Monorail is a 5.4-kilometre-long (3.4 mi) monorail connecting the Atlantis Hotel to the Gateway Towers at the foot of the island. The monorail connects the Palm Jumeirah to the mainland, with a planned further extension to the Red Line of the Dubai Metro. The line began operating on 30 April 2009. It is the first monorail in the Middle East.
Construction of the Palm Jumeirah island began in June 2001 and the developers announced handover of the first residential units in 2006.
In early October 2007, the Palm Jumeirah had already become the world's largest artificial island. Also at this time, 75% of the properties were ready to hand over, with 500 families already residing on the island.By the end of 2009, 28 hotels were opened on the Crescent.
The complexities of the construction were blamed, in part, for the extended delays to the completion of the project, the date of which was pushed back multiple times and was nearly two years late.
In 2009 The New York Times reported that NASA's laser altimeter satellites had measured the Palm as sinking at the rate of 5 mm (0.20 in) per year. In response Nakheel said they had received no reports of structural problems of a type that would be expected if there were any subsidence, and pointed out that the laser satellites had a measurement resolution of only 50 mm (2