Georgia: Silk Road Group has secured €15 million in funding from IFU, Denmark’s Investment Fund for Developing Countries, to transform Tbilisi’s historic Telegraph building into a lifestyle hotel.
IFU’s funding is provided via the Danish SDG Investment Fund, which is backed by large Danish pension funds.
The 220-room hotel will create 350 local jobs and secure the future of one of Tbilisi’s landmark buildings. Plans for the hotel include ground floor F&B facilities, rooftop terrace and redevelopment of the hotel’s courtyard into meeting and banqueting facilities.
The redevelopment will be built to LEED Gold standards for environmental impact, the first building in the Caucasus to achieve the certification.
Silk Road Group, one of Georgia’s largest business groups, is also set to agree financing deals with local and international banks before construction begins.
The company’s founding chairman, George Ramishvili, said: “I am happy to announce that the Danish SDG Investment Fund has committed to invest €15m into our new project to renovate the iconic former Telegraph building in the heart of Tbilisi. We started investing into the Georgian hospitality industry back in 2007. Those were not particularly easy times either due to the world economic crisis and the 2008 August war but our projects proved successful. So now we are full of optimism. We believe in the future of the Georgian tourism and hospitality industries. We are grateful to IFU for their trust in the Georgian economy in general and particularly into our Telegraph project in these difficult times. I think this is a good sign for the whole our country.”
IFU CEO Torben Huss said: “We are very pleased with our investment, and we look forward to seeing this landmark building transform into a modern and sustainable hotel creating local jobs and paving the way for further tourism and business in Georgia.”
Built in the 1970s, the Telegraph building is one of the city’s most recognisable Soviet-era buildings.
Georgia’s economy minister Natia Turnava, said: “This project is great news for tourism in Georgia, which has become an integral part of the wider economy in recent years. It will create local jobs and see a significant investment in the local area at a particularly challenging economic time.”