Rank: Elder Joined: 10/9/2008 Posts: 5,389
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Have just read about Miguna's experience (in his new book) regarding how he purchased land (1/2 acre plot) in Runda and put up a house while still in Canada. There are important lessons for those intending to take the same route. Interesting to note that he bought the plot at just Ksh2.5m 10 yrs ago. This is how narrates it: Quote:....by then I had saved enough to purchase or build a decent house in one of Nairobi’s most desired neighbourhoods. I resolved to build in Runda, a tranquil suburb which felt a little like a Nairobi equivalent to Bradford, near enough yet not too near to the hustle and bustle of the city centre. I had fallen in love with Runda at first sight. By the time I had inspected the available plots being sold, I’d made a decision to buy. I signed the agreement of purchase and sale on the spot and undertook to submit the instalment payments starting one week from that day, with a further undertaking to complete paying the Sh2.5m for the half acre plot within six months. Again, that was one of the best decisions I have ever made. I have never regretted it. Within six months of signing the agreement of purchase and sale for the Runda property, I had completed making my payments and was now only waiting for the delivery of my title deed. By early July, 2003, I had, working alongside an architect and engineer, devised a plan. And then for the next four years, I would travel three or four times a year in order to inspect the construction. I was in Kenya for the groundbreaking ceremony, the foundation being laid, the walls going up and the roof going on. In time I felt that the tens of thousands of dollars I had spent travelling back and forth were an investment as they would otherwise have been lost through theft, fraud and mismanagement. And so despite a lawyer absconding with funds early on; some theft, pilferage and misappropriation during the construction; and the distance between Kenya and Canada, the shell of the house, including the roof, was completed by September 2004. By the time my family and I had returned to Kenya in September 2007, the house was almost ready for occupation.
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