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  • Selling Armenians on Armenia

    Selling Armenians on Armenia

    Condos lure expatriates back home
    By Naush Boghossian, Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    June 20 2004

    GLENDALE -- Forget Hawaii, Aspen or the Caribbean. How about buying
    a time share in ... Armenia?

    It may sound like a tough sell -- mainstream attractions are few
    in this arid, agricultural country of 3 million. But builders of
    Western-style town homes just outside the capital Yerevan believe
    they have ready buyers among the more than 8 million Armenians living
    outside the country.

    "Come Home to Armenia" beckons the marketing campaign of East
    Coast-based Hovnanian International Inc., which has just begun to
    market the time shares in Glendale, home to the largest population
    of Armenians outside Armenia.

    "To local Armenians, I say, It's your land, it's your responsibility,
    to go back and see how magnificent it is," said Hovnanian
    representative Hilda Grigorian, who staged the first time share meeting
    this month in Glendale, drawing more than 100 prospective buyers.

    Armenian-Americans have flocked to visit Armenia since its independence
    13 years ago from the former Soviet Union. There they encounter a
    land of great natural and historic beauty -- and Third World living
    conditions.

    Running water in the capital city is sometimes limited to a few hours
    in the morning and evening, phone service and electricity are erratic
    -- elevators break down in high-rise buildings. No building codes or
    inspections exist despite the pattern of earthquakes -- a reality in
    a place where the average monthly income is about $24.

    But for those willing to plunk down $4,500 to $6,000 for a 20-year
    lease on one of Hovnanian's fully furnished 1,500- to 1,800-square-foot
    town homes, the one-week-a-year time shares provide an old-world
    setting without its nitty-gritty inconvenience.

    In fact, Hovnanian's enclave, which at build-out will have 500
    single-family homes, looks much like homes in planned communities in
    Irvine or Santa Clarita -- only with Mount Ararat as a backdrop.

    "Our goal is to get the Armenian diaspora to return and to return
    frequently -- if not every year, but every other year," said Arthur
    Havighorst, vice president for Vahakni (Hovnanian) Homes and Timeshare
    Resort.

    The pull of family and culture is similar to the concept behind time
    shares in Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the United Arab Emirates
    -- not necessarily considered the top vacation destinations for the
    average traveler.

    La Crescenta resident Leonig Shekherdimian already visits Armenia
    once a year to see family and take in scenes from her homeland. She
    typically rents a Yerevan apartment, with its trials of broken plumbing
    and sweltering accommodations with no air-conditioning.

    A time share would mean that "I don't have to worry about no water
    or no heating or no air conditioning."

    La Crescenta resident Gagik Alagozian visited Armenia for the first
    time two years ago, and that was enough for him to decide to invest
    in the country.

    "I opened up a small business there -- I have cattle -- and I want
    to expand," said the aerospace engineer who moved to America from
    Iran 27 years ago.

    He also plans to invest in a home.

    "We go to Big Bear to see nature, but in Armenia, there are places
    absolutely untouched that you can explore."

    There is also an effort to market the time shares to retirees and
    tourists.

    More than 41,000 visitors come to the country each year, and tourism
    is now the second largest part of the country's GDP.

    "Armenia is a beautiful country. It has a strong, ancient history,
    and it was the first Christian nation," Shekherdimian said. "Just to
    visit the churches there says a lot about our country and culture."
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