A vertical condominium is the most capital-efficient use of well-located urban land in Costa Rica. Three to twelve stories of stacked residential units, individually registered under condominium law, generate significant value per square meter of land. PDC designs and manages the full development process.
Costa Rica's primary condominium legislation, Ley 7933 (Ley Reguladora de la Propiedad en Condominio), governs both horizontal and vertical condominium developments. Each unit registers as a separate property with its own folio real (title number) in the National Registry. Common areas — lobby, corridors, stairwells, elevators, roof, parking, pool — register as common property shared proportionally among owners.
Each unit owner's porcentaje de participación determines their share of common area maintenance costs and their voting weight in the Asamblea de Condóminos. The condominium administration is governed by a reglamento interno that PDC prepares as part of the development package.
Registration requires a licensed surveyor to prepare the plano catastrado of each unit and a notary to register the condominium declaration. PDC coordinates this with our legal team to ensure registration is complete before the first unit sale closes.
Vertical condominiums in Costa Rica are built with reinforced concrete moment frames — columns, beams, and flat or ribbed slabs providing the lateral resistance required by the CSCR-10 seismic code. The flat slab system is preferred for apartments as it maximizes floor-to-floor clearance and simplifies MEP routing.
For buildings of 4 or more stories, the CFIA requires a structural engineer with demonstrated seismic design specialty as the responsible professional. Calculations must demonstrate CSCR-10 Zone III compliance — applicable throughout Guanacaste — and must be peer-reviewed before permit issuance.
Foundation design typically requires a geotechnical study. Mat foundations, combined footings, or pile systems may be required depending on soil conditions. PDC's structural engineers have designed vertical buildings through 12 stories on the Pacific Coast.
Fire safety requirements are governed by NFPA 101 as adopted by the Benemérito Cuerpo de Bomberos. Buildings of 3+ stories require a fire alarm system; buildings of 5+ stories require a full wet-pipe sprinkler system. Fire stairs must be pressurized and fire-rated per NFPA 101 egress requirements.
Elevators are required above 4 stories (or when the highest occupied floor exceeds 12m). Installation must comply with INTECO standards and requires Ministerio de Salud inspection. PDC specifies systems from suppliers with local service presence — Otis, Schindler, and Thyssenkrupp all operate in Costa Rica.
Mechanical systems include per-unit split AC, central domestic water pressure system, fire water storage cistern, sewage collection, and electrical distribution with individual utility meters per unit. PDC's MEP engineers design all systems concurrently with the architectural design.
PDC designs vertical condominiums with a mixed unit program tailored to location and market. In Guanacaste (Liberia, Tamarindo, Playa Flamingo), the most absorbable mix is typically 20% studios (45–55m²), 50% 1BR units (65–85m²), and 30% 2BR units (95–130m²). Three-bedroom units (140–180m²) work well on premium upper floors with ocean views.
PDC targets 78–85% floor plan efficiency through optimized corridor widths, compact cores, and efficient bathroom stacking. Upper-floor units with Pacific or mountain views command 15–35% price premiums over similar units below.
Amenity programming typically includes a rooftop pool and terrace, gym, lobby with co-working area, and parking structure (1 space minimum per unit). Amenity quality strongly influences absorption rate and price per m².
The permit process involves parallel tracks: CFIA permit (architectural, structural, electrical, mechanical, fire, and plumbing plans), municipal building permit, Ministerio de Salud approval, and Bomberos fire safety review. If SETENA environmental review is triggered, it must be completed before CFIA submission.
A typical 8–12 story condominium requires 14–20 months from first submission to construction permit. Construction takes an additional 24–36 months. Total project timeline from land acquisition to first unit delivery is typically 48–60 months.
Construction cost ranges from $1,800–$2,800 per m² of gross built area, depending on finish level, structural complexity, and site conditions. This covers structure, enclosure, MEP systems, and finishes — excluding land, professional fees, permits, and sales commissions.
PDC designs and manages vertical condominium developments on Costa Rica's Pacific Coast — from structural engineering and permits to construction supervision and unit delivery.