Monthly Archives: February 2010

‘Residences’ expert@work in naming a condo

What’s the name of your condo?

If you bought a unit in the 1980s, you probably live in a project with words like ‘palm’, ‘garden’ or ‘park’ in the name.

In more recent times, it became fashionable to incorporate auspicious numbers, like Scotts 28 and 8@Woodleigh.

Now, many developers have plumped for Residences.

Examples include Residences Botanique in Serangoon, Kovan Residences in Upper Serangoon, The Shore Residences in Katong, Vista Residences in Balestier, Holland Residences in the Holland Road area and Tembeling Residence in the East Coast area.

A spokesman for the Street and Building Names Board said that of the 25 to 30 condominium names it approved in 2008 and last year, names with terms like ‘residences’, ’suites’ and ‘@’ were most popular.

New property player Ferrell Asset Management opted for Ferrell Residences for its first condo in Bukit Timah, saying thatthe word ‘residences’ evokes ‘a very personal and intimate feeling towards the development’.

Ho Bee’s general manager of marketing and business development, Mr Chong Hock Chang, shares a similar view. ‘The word conjures a very homely image,’ he said. The firm’s projects include Orange Grove Residences and Dakota Residences.

For developer TG Group, there is a more mundane reason for naming its 102-unit development in the East Coast, St Patrick’s Residences.

It conforms to the residential zoning of the area, and differentiates itself from industrial or commercial zones, said its head of corporate affairs, Mr Lowell Loh.

Frasers Centrepoint Homes, which is launching Residences Botanique this weekend, also drew attention to the word Botanique.

It reflects the wide array of plants and landscaping of the resort-style condo, said a spokesman.

Far East Organization said it tries to express what makes a development unique via the condo’s name.

Its The Shore Residences is so named because its ‘large waterscape with mini beaches and coconut trees’ aims to recapture the old Katong ambience with a long shoreline.

But do names really matter with buyers? Apparently not, it seems. Mrs Debora Neo, 44, who lives in Rivervale Crest condo in Sengkang, said price and location matter more.

Proximity to schools is also crucial, said the mother of two teenage children.

As for the use of ‘residences’, she said it reminded her not of a home or condominium, but of serviced apartments for foreigners here for a short stay.

Source : Sunday Times – 28 Feb 2010

Copthorne Orchid to go ahead with condo plans

Tenants had heard it before: The Copthorne Orchid Hotel would be torn down for a condominium.

So there was a sense of deja vu when they learnt from reading The Straits Times last Monday that the 440-room hotel in Dunearn Road would go.

In 2005, City Developments Ltd (CDL) had said it planned to turn the hotel’s site into a condominium. But that did not happen.

CDL owns hotelier Millennium & Copthorne (M&C), which operates the Copthorne Orchid Hotel.

But its latest announcement seems to be for real. A CDL spokesman told The Sunday Times it wants to launch the condominium project as early as this July.

The property developer has not decided on a firm date to put the 150 units of the project on sale as it ‘had just obtained provisional permission to redevelop’.

Depending on how well the condominium sells and existing tenancy obligations, the building may be torn down only next year or later.

M&C held back its plans in 2005 ‘as there was a projected shortage of hotel rooms’, its spokesman said.

But its recent announcement was not good news to its tenants – one of which has been leasing space in the hotel for 35 years.

Madam Anne Lee, 52, owner of Anne Salon, was upset that the hotel withheld such important information as she renewed her lease just three months ago.

‘They must tell us so we can start looking for another landlord,’ said Madam Lee, who has been running her salon there since 1975.

Nice Express, which operates its Singapore-Kuala Lumpur express bus service from the hotel, was also not informed about the plans.

Mr Charles Lawrence, 56, operations and sales supervisor at Nice’s Singapore office, said: ‘I do not know whether to move or stay.’

This comes at a bad time for Nice as it spent $100,000 last year to renovate its office at the hotel.

When asked why tenants were not informed, an M&C spokesman said: ‘We have not sent out any notices as there is no firm date yet.

‘The terms of the tenancy agreement contain a three-month notice clause. We have sufficient time on hand to serve proper and timely notice to all our tenants.’

Source : Sunday Times – 28 Feb 2010