The Syqora Journal: Inside Syria’s Next Chapter
Timely insights from the frontlines of Syria’s reopening. From infrastructure and energy to retail and real estate, Syqora’s Journal explores the high-impact opportunities reshaping the country’s business landscape — and how global companies can lead.

Written by
Syqora Group
Residential Growth With Strategic Value
Population density hasn’t disappeared. Displacement, war, and economic slowdown may have shifted things temporarily, but Syria’s urban demand remains intact. Families are returning. Professionals are rebuilding. And residential construction is quietly picking up in areas where infrastructure can support it. That makes real estate one of the few sectors where demand is built in — and timing is everything.
Housing projects in key cities like Damascus, Aleppo, and Latakia are already moving forward. Mid-rise apartments, villas, and mixed-use residential spaces are being approved at the municipal level. The need isn’t speculative — it’s functional. These projects house the workers, staff, and citizens who will support Syria’s wider economic reactivation.
Commercial Properties With First-Mover Potential
Where goods will be sold, services delivered, and brands launched, space must be secured. That’s where commercial real estate becomes more than investment — it becomes leverage. Owning early retail hubs, logistics yards, and professional buildings will not only generate rental yield, but also attract international partners who need an entry point.
Industrial zones are also receiving renewed attention. With power infrastructure being rebuilt, more sites are becoming viable for factory usage, warehousing, and light manufacturing. And with minimal competition, property developers have the flexibility to build to suit incoming demand rather than squeezing into overbuilt spaces.
A Controlled, High-Upside Environment
Syqora Group works directly with developers, municipalities, and private investors to secure land, permits, and execution teams. Whether you're building to rent, build-to-sell, or holding long-term, our job is to streamline the process — legally, logistically, and locally.
“We're not just looking at maps,” one partner recently told us. “We're talking to the people approving them.”
With costs still low, competition minimal, and buyers starting to circle, Syrian real estate is one of the few global markets where institutional results are still possible with first-mover capital. For diaspora investors, emerging market funds, or developers seeking a new frontier — the time to act is now.