Prague - Private investors want to build hundreds of new apartments in Prague's Jižní Město in the coming years. Some are responding to the increasing number of older people in the capital city and are planning homes specifically for them, said the mayor of Prague 11, Marta Šorfová, to reporters today. The prices of the apartments have not yet been disclosed by the investors. For seniors, for example, the construction of the Mariánský dům is being prepared near the Roztyly metro station, which is supposed to have over 300 apartments. In the same part of Prague 11, another investor intends to build another residential building for older citizens called Rajský dvůr. The city district has not yet approved his request to change the zoning plan. The decision has been postponed for now. They want to have a guarantee that the new building cannot later be converted into a hotel. Both buildings will have, in addition to apartments, healthcare and rehabilitation facilities. In Jižní Město, other standard apartments will also be built. The council of Prague 11 has already approved the completion of Kulatý Chodovec. However, it has the condition that the buildings will be a maximum of four stories high, will be recessed into the terrain, and that the investor will also build a network of sidewalks and a bridge over the local stream. In the area of Jižní Město II in Roztyly, on currently unused land, an apartment complex called Jižní terasy is set to be created. Jižní Město, which is home to more than 80,000 people, is already one of the largest housing estates in the Czech Republic.
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