Sure we can, every single super luxury condominium tower (of which there are thousands all over the planet) offers this same type of community, though even more closely packed in - and inconveniently for those who might make use of them - a little too close to the rest of civilization.
If anything, as a newly minted robber baron or junior member of a minor royal family or undersecretary of an ossified military dictatorship, this kind of development is a major step up when you're looking for a place quiet and out of the way to tuck your third or fourth mistress our of sight. where she is perfectly happy to idly sit around sticking on different kinds of eyelashes all day, getting foot rubs (and more) from the stable of live-in domestic staff who can't travel around town gossiping (because there is no town), and and taking Insta selfies to humblebrag about how wealthy and "blessed" she and her family are. Family whom you have gladly moved in at her request because like her are now walled in the same garden.
Then there's the enormous market for Airbnb McMillionaire people who want to live like this but can only afford it for two or three weeks, or those who travel with an enormous entourage and need to house them all in one place for the same, ahem, privacy reasons as above. Throw in a sprinkling of other mixed uses like day rate rent-a-mansions for tv and music video shoots and aspiring wealth influencers and you have a tidy little business here.
This definitely could have made money assuming it wasn't compromised by some showstopping flaw like the highway (or sewer or water or electricity) your inside contact in the regional government could never get approved.
If anything, as a newly minted robber baron or junior member of a minor royal family or undersecretary of an ossified military dictatorship, this kind of development is a major step up when you're looking for a place quiet and out of the way to tuck your third or fourth mistress our of sight. where she is perfectly happy to idly sit around sticking on different kinds of eyelashes all day, getting foot rubs (and more) from the stable of live-in domestic staff who can't travel around town gossiping (because there is no town), and and taking Insta selfies to humblebrag about how wealthy and "blessed" she and her family are. Family whom you have gladly moved in at her request because like her are now walled in the same garden.
Then there's the enormous market for Airbnb McMillionaire people who want to live like this but can only afford it for two or three weeks, or those who travel with an enormous entourage and need to house them all in one place for the same, ahem, privacy reasons as above. Throw in a sprinkling of other mixed uses like day rate rent-a-mansions for tv and music video shoots and aspiring wealth influencers and you have a tidy little business here.
This definitely could have made money assuming it wasn't compromised by some showstopping flaw like the highway (or sewer or water or electricity) your inside contact in the regional government could never get approved.