Why New Residential Developments Specify Africa Property Managers
The moment a residential scheme reaches practical completion, the developer’s obligations do not end — they transform. Defect management, tenant onboarding, service-charge governance, and the daily rhythms of communal life all begin the instant the first keys are handed over. Developers who have built to a premium standard understand that the post-handover phase is where asset quality is either protected or quietly eroded. Africa Property Managers has served this transition since 1991, partnering with developers across Ghana and Togo to ensure that newly completed residential schemes enter the market under management structures that reflect the same care invested in their construction.
Our engagement model is relationship-driven and discreet. We do not impose generic property management frameworks onto completed schemes. Instead, we study the architectural intent, the resident profile, and the landlord’s long-term positioning before designing a management partnership that is specific to the development. This bespoke approach is precisely what discerning developers — and the high-net-worth residents they attract — have come to expect.
Specification Requirements Unique to New Residential Developments
Post-handover management for new residential schemes carries obligations that differ materially from the management of established stock. Defect notification periods must be actively administered; communal infrastructure — generators, water systems, lifts, perimeter security — requires structured commissioning and documented handover protocols between the construction team and the management function. Service-charge budgets must be established from first principles, balancing prudent reserve-fund contributions against resident expectations formed during the sales and marketing phase.
In the Ghanaian regulatory context, adherence to the Rent Act and relevant Land Use and Spatial Planning frameworks shapes how tenancy agreements, security deposits, and estate governance documents are structured from the outset. In Togo, equivalent statutory requirements govern landlord–tenant relations and must be woven into management protocols before the first resident takes occupation. Establishing these foundations correctly at handover avoids the remedial work that invariably costs more — in time, resource, and reputation — when addressed retrospectively.
Recommended Services for New Residential Developments
- Residential Estate Management — full-scope day-to-day stewardship of communal areas, resident relations, and service-charge administration
- Defect Management Liaison — structured coordination between residents, contractors, and the developer during the defect liability period
- Tenancy and Lettings Management — referencing, onboarding, and ongoing tenancy management for developer-retained rental units
- Facilities Coordination — vendor management for security, cleaning, landscaping, and mechanical services
- Financial Reporting and Service-Charge Governance — transparent, auditable income and expenditure reporting to the developer and the residents’ association
Notable Project Types
Africa Property Managers is engaged at handover across a range of residential typologies. Gated communities of detached and semi-detached premium villas in Accra’s established residential corridors — where communal infrastructure is substantial and resident expectations are correspondingly high — represent a core project type. Equally, mid- to high-rise apartment schemes in mixed-use developments along the Accra waterfront and in Airport City require a management approach that accounts for vertical living protocols, lift maintenance schedules, and the governance of shared amenity spaces.
In Togo, we have managed post-handover transitions for premium residential compounds in Lomé developed by diaspora investors seeking a trusted, on-the-ground management partner to protect an asset they cannot oversee directly. In each context, the scale and complexity of the scheme inform a bespoke management programme — never a generic template applied uniformly across dissimilar properties.
Compliance and Standards
- Full adherence to Ghana’s Rent Act and applicable Land Use and Spatial Planning Authority (LUSPA) requirements
- Compliance with Togo’s statutory landlord–tenant legislation governing deposits, notice periods, and lease registration
- Documented defect liability period administration aligned to the developer’s construction contract obligations
- Transparent service-charge accounting presented in accordance with accepted estate management governance standards
- Data discretion protocols protecting the identity and financial affairs of high-net-worth residents and diaspora investors
- Regular management reporting cycles delivered to the developer and, where applicable, to the residents’ association committee