How Iran’s Missiles Happen To Be Clearing the Path for Israel’s Real Estate Giants
The curious case of the 10% 'misses' that became multi-million
In the dense, sun-drenched urban dilapidation of central Israel, a statistical miracle is unfolding under the shadow of ballistic fire—one that has transformed the misery of missile bombardment into a sudden windfall for the nation’s most powerful real estate developers.
While the Iron Dome and Arrow systems allegedly maintain a staggering 90% interception rate, it is the 10% of Iranian missiles that manage to penetrate the defenses that have caught the eye of urban planners and alert residents alike.
A spatial analysis of these impact zones reveals a pattern that has sparked a fierce national debate: the structures sustaining catastrophic damage—those immediately slated for rapid demolition and high-density redevelopment—are overwhelmingly pre-1980s residential blocks.
In a striking number of cases, these specific buildings were either already stalled in the bureaucratic pipeline for “Pinui Binui” renewal programs or were fast-tracked for luxury skyscraper development within weeks of being struck. This has occurred at a velocity entirely foreign to the traditionally glacial Israeli planning process.
No comments:
Post a Comment