Property World Africa Network (PWAN) has started the construction of a luxury estate in the Federal Capital Territory’s Centenary City, Abuja.
PWAN’s Max Grove Estate is a 9.1-hectare cosmopolitan property with 236 apartments ranging from four to five bedrooms.
Augustine Onwumere, Chairman of PWAN Group, described the Max Grove housing plan in Abuja as a place to conquer fears, accomplish aspirations, and residences built to ensure that expectations were satisfied.
He stated that the initiative would provide chances for the Centenary City, and that whoever makes a deposit on any of the buildings before the end of August 2022 will receive a saloon automobile.
According to Onwumere, engineers, business development managers, and independent marketers are involved in the project would commence the immediate construction of structures at the project site.
“This luxury project is being constructed to meet the expectations of those who would show interest in it and our team is to commence construction immediately,” he stated.
Also speaking, Ike Odenigwe, the Managing Director of Centenary City, stated that the city was developed in two sites in Nigeria by former President Goodluck Jonathan in order to unite Nigerians.
Odenigwe praised PWAN Group and stated that the Centenary City was a free trade zone for the advancement of economic activities in Nigeria, as he urged investors from around the world to consider the city their home.
Baron Okwuosa, Project Manager of PWAN Group, stated that work had begun on the site and that families were scheduled to be placed in their respective residences by December 2023.
He told investors that the estate will have everything needed for a suitable atmosphere, “including decent roads, electricity, and security.”
The Centennial City is a planned city in the FCT. The project is a master-planned development overseen by Centenary City FZE, as part of Nigeria’s vision to create the city of the future along the same lines as Dubai, Monaco and Singapore.
The city would be developed from the scratch on 1,260 hectares of virgin land southwest of Nigeria’s capital, Abuja, and 5 kilometers from the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport.