Feasiblity in real estate projects is not just about numbers.
- serdar serdaroğlu

- Dec 30, 2025
- 2 min read
Feasibility in real estate projects is not just about numbers.
The success of a project is not determined solely by construction costs per square meter, sales prices, NPV and IRR tables, but by a well-structured scenario strategy.
A robust feasibility study evaluates all of the following together:
📍 Location & environmental dynamics
🏗️ Functional mix and use scenarios
👥 Target audience and demand behavior
⏱️ Timing and market cycles
⚖️ Risks, flexibility, and alternative strategies
Numbers show the outcome. But strategy explains why and how that outcome occurs.
That is why a strong feasibility study is not just an Excel file —it is a well-written project story.
1️⃣ Feasibility = Scenario Design
No project moves forward based on a single future assumption. A realistic feasibility study evaluates:
Optimistic
Base
Conservative
scenarios together.
What happens if sales velocity slows down? How can the project adapt if one function fails to meet demand? Can the project survive if financing is delayed?
A strong feasibility study produces answers to these questions in advance.
2️⃣ Human Behavior Behind the Numbers
Square meter prices do not increase. Perception does.
Who is the real buyer of this project?
Why would they choose this project?
What are the alternatives?
Without understanding sociology, lifestyle trends, demographics, and consumer behavior, feasibility remains incomplete.
3️⃣ Functional Mix Is a Strategic Decision
Residential, office, retail, serviced apartments, social functions…These are not just revenue items. They are:
Risk distribution tools
Cash flow stabilizers
Brand and value multipliers
The wrong function can weaken a project — even in the right location.
4️⃣ Timing Is as Critical as Pricing
The same project can:
Create value at the right time
Become a burden at the wrong time
Sales launch, construction phases, delivery timing…All are part of the strategic timeline of feasibility.
5️⃣ A Good Feasibility Study Is Flexible
If Plan A fails, Plan B must be ready. Unit layouts, functional distribution, phasing…
A feasibility study that does not allow adaptation is fragile.

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