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Standards needed for smart homes

Updated: 10:34, 10/02/2019
‘Smart homes’ are becoming a new trend in Vietnam’s housing market, however, experts say that standards for ‘smart’ projects are needed.

Without standards, some worry that developers will advertise their projects as ‘smart’ to attract buyers and raise prices.

According to Nguyen Van Hau, general director of real estate firm Asian Holding, developers are applying technologies in building management like magnetic cards for elevator control and air-conditioning and door control via smartphone.

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Vietnam’s 'mart home’ market volume was forecast to reach 437 million USD by 2023.

Hau said that most of the popular ‘smart home’ technologies in Vietnam remained simple, adding that ‘smart homes’ should be more than that.

Advertising housing projects as ‘smart’ could be a way for developers to increase prices, Hau said.

He added that there is still no agency or organization in charge of evaluating the efficiency of ‘smart home’ technologies.

Vo Huynh Tuan Kiet from property services firm CBRE Vietnam said that the ‘smart’ factor in Vietnam’s housing market remained simple.

Kiet said that ‘smart homes’ would need integrated solutions to optimize usage, such as promoting energy saving and recycling waste, adding that those mechanisms are still rare in Vietnam.

"Smart projects also need smart transport connectivity," Kiệt added.

According to Pham Lam, general director of real estate consultancy firm DKRA Vietnam, due to the lack of standards for ‘smart homes’, many buyers were disappointed about their new homes because the quality and convenience were not as advertised.

Lam said that standards for ‘smart homes’ should also include energy management systems, smart operation systems, security systems, connectivity and information security.

Le Hoang Chau, president of HCM City Real Estate Association, said many property developers are advertising their projects as high-end or luxury but their quality is not up to scratch.

Now, the property market is seeing more projects advertised as ‘smart’, Chau said.

In November 2018, the association proposed to the management agencies to tighten quality control on housing projects to prevent developers from exaggerating the features of their projects to increase prices.

According to the statistics portal Statista, revenue in Vietnam’s ‘smart home’ market is anticipated to amount to 83 million USD in 2019 with an annual growth rate anticipated at 51.7 percent in 2019-23.

Market volume was forecast to reach 437 million USD by 2023. Household penetration is 1.2 percent in 2019 and expected to hit 7.8 percent by 2023.

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Source: VNA

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