Daily Archives: 14 Nov 2009

Pasir Panjang Village Centre to go

CHANGE is coming to the Pasir Panjang Village area, home to a clutch of pubs, restaurants and shops.

The Village Centre, a four-storey building housing a Cold Storage supermarket and various shops ranging from a nail salon to a laundromat, will be pulled down and rebuilt as a condominium with shop spaces on the first floor and in its basement.

The tenants in the building have been given until April next year to move out.

A 30-space carpark and a bungalow sitting next to the building will also become part of the new five-storey development, which will be ready by 2013.

But the row of pubs and restaurants occupying the conserved shophouses next door will stay.

This change comes just as this sleepy hollow seems to be blossoming into a slightly busier suburban nook.

Mr C. K. Ching, chief executive of boutique property developer Hume Homes, which owns The Village Centre, said the tenants have to go in order for the place to be revitalised.

‘There will be a better concept, more variety and will really add to the environment. Now, the place is very quiet,’ he said.

Hume Homes bought the building from Ridge Investments for $23 million in June. A showroom launch for the condominium will be held in January, and the wrecking ball will start swinging in April.

The commercial space in the new development has already attracted interest from Starbucks, while Cold Storage has also expressed interest in moving back in.

The building – at the junction of South Buona Vista and Pasir Panjang roads – was a quiet spot only two years ago.

But tenants have since moved in, and brought with them customers in search of food and a tipple, groceries and other services, though the buzz is nowhere near that of Holland Village.

The change has ruffled a few feathers.

Nail salon owner Doreen Tan, 35, said she signed a two-year lease for her second-floor shop, Vois, only in May, and had sunk $20,000 into renovations.

‘When we got the news, it was such a big blow to us,’ she said of the termination letter, which came last month.

Some residents also dread the loss of the area’s only commercial development.

Mrs Davi Beschizza, an artist in her 40s, and a mother of one, who lives in a condominium a 10-minute walk from The Village Centre, said: ‘It’s going to be very inconvenient. We don’t have any other supermarket near here. For the next three years, I will have to take a bus or taxi to Bukit Timah Plaza or West Coast Mall, both of which are quite far away.’

Source : Straits Times – 13 Nov 2009

Singapore Property : Home sales help CDL post 28% rise in profit

CITY Developments (CDL) has chalked up a 28 per cent jump in third-quarter net profit to $193.6 million, thanks to strong new home sales. Revenue climbed 36.7 per cent to $940.9 million.

In the period ended Sept 30, CDL sold 854 residential units, bringing to 1,391 the total for the first nine months of the year, with a sales value of $1.72 billion – a stark contrast to the 360 units for the same period last year at $340 million.

The sales in the July to September period included 119 units at Livia and 331 units at its 396-unit Hundred Trees condo in West Coast Drive.

CDL said the proliferation of favourable low interest rates on housing loans, aided by plenty of cash in the system, played a part in motivating investors to park their money in property.

This is particularly so when banks are offering very low rates on fixed deposits.

Buying interest in the next few months is expected to be ‘relatively stable’, but not at the same frenetic level of the second and third quarters as the Government had announced market-calming measures in September.

Already, the market has turned quiet. CDL executive chairman Kwek Leng Beng attributed this slowdown to ’sentiment’.

Still, before the year is out, CDL wants to launch a 177-unit project next to its The Arte at Thomson. This will feature one- to four-bedders.

The company is reviewing its South Beach project in light of the change in economic conditions to reposition it and ensure it is ‘extraordinary’.

Property market sentiment is showing signs of recovery, but the office segment remains challenging and the hotel business may take more time to recover fully, said CDL in its statement.

Its pre-tax profit for property development almost doubled to $ 174.1 million in the third quarter, while pre-tax profit from hotel operations fell from $70.5 million to $37 million.

Pre-tax profit from rental properties slipped from $74 million to $35.5 million.

Earnings per share rose to 21.3 cents from 16.6 cents, while net asset value per share was $6.39, up from $5.97 at the end of last year.

CDL shares closed 12 cents lower yesterday at $10.08.

Source : Straits Times – 13 Nov 2009