Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
He is the owner of some prime land in London.
Not only is this prime land, it also comes with a view of the Capitol.
"If there are no resources to make things happen," he said, "how much longer do you let a vacant building stand on prime land?"
Prime land values in Tokyo may soon approach $2 billion per acre.
The government has also been criticized for giving prime land to prominent officials and political allies.
"The tramways are sitting on prime land," a businessman said.
Initially, developers rapidly built on prime land at the three corners of the town.
Yet the dark, fertile soil and good irrigation made it prime land for growing vegetables.
Several personalities from the movie world including Suhasini have bought prime land in this area.
Mumbai has always been short of space, and with so much prime land up for grabs, the developers moved in.
"The price reflects the value of scarce prime land close to New York," she said.
Prime land for another hotel or office block.
His master plan for the prime land he had purchased in western Los Angeles.
Not being prime land for planting, the land was held until new settlers needed property.
Speculators claimed prime land and access to transportation and water.
The campus site is located on prime land in Johar Town.
(The agency would not sell him the building, which stands on prime land in central Berlin.)
Our real estate industry knows the price we paid for unregulated dumping of wastes on what would otherwise be prime land.
If the money is sufficient to compensate for the loss of prime land, he said, then plenty of farmers will sign up.
Their spacious homes are being built in prime land along the banks of the Tigris, which runs through this sprawling city.
I myself have been promised ten parcels of prime land, which I can keep or sell."
And if you believe that, Ive got some prime land to show you in an asteroid belt.
The centre of Lysterfield reflects its rural status, with a farm shop and a petrol station, which is advertised as 'prime land'.
Like American Indians, Aborigines were forced or negotiated off prime land.
Singleton's secret was that he owned fifteen acres of prime land in Manhattan in the 1800s.