Monthly Archives: March 2010

Building Singapore, brick by brick

CONSTRUCTION has been a flourishing industry right from the earliest days of modern Singapore.

Pioneering building contractors in the 19th century included Lim Loh, who built the Victoria Memorial Hall and the old Parliament House, and Naraina Pillai, the man behind Sri Mariamman Temple, the first Hindu temple here.

Immigrant labourers who assembled this city, brick by brick, included Indian convicts brought over by the British, and samsui women from China with their red roof-like headdresses.

One milestone for the construction industry in colonial Singapore was the setting up of the Singapore Improvement Trust (SIT) in 1927 to build low-cost housing.

Another milestone was the formation of the Singapore Chinese Contractors Association in 1937 to improve work relations among local contractors and ensure regular supplies of building materials. After World War II, the association changed its name to the Singapore Contractors Association to reflect its multiracial membership, and today it is known as the Singapore Contractors Association Limited.

By 1960, there were 400 contracting firms here employing 4 per cent of the total workforce, according to National University of Singapore building professor George Ofori’s book, Managing Construction Industry Development.

The 1960s saw the start of a building boom as Singapore began rapid urbanisation under the People’s Action Party government.

The Housing Board was formed in 1960 to replace SIT. In five years, the HDB built 50,000 homes, more than double that ever built by its predecessor.

To achieve this, then HDB chairman Lim Kim San broke the hold of contractors’ cartels and their price-fixing by allowing anyone to tender.

HDB also adopted standardised specifications and construction methods – still its modus operandi today – to make the flats easier to design and faster to build.

The 1970s was the decade of major civil engineering and high-rise projects like the Benjamin Sheares Bridge, DBS Building and the first passenger terminal at Changi Airport.

The industry here saw an influx of large foreign construction firms, mainly Japanese. They employed or worked with Singapore contractors on these projects.

As some Singapore firms expanded and grew in the 1980s, they formed major joint ventures and partnerships with international firms. Key projects included highways, port development and the building of the Mass Rapid Transit.

The Construction Industry Development Board (CIDB), a statutory board, was set up in 1984 – a time when the industry was becoming increasingly overheated and reliant on transient, low-skilled foreign labour. CIDB launched schemes to upgrade workers’ skills and develop the capabilities of construction firms.

The 1990s were growth years, with construction demand peaking at close to $25 billion in 1997, just before the effects of the Asian financial crisis were felt.

The resulting building slump led to the Construction 21 review of the industry in 1999, which sought to raise productivity, reduce the dependence on foreign workers, and improve on-site safety.

In 1999, the CIDB was merged with the regulatory body at the time, the former Public Works Department’s Building Control Division, to form the Building and Construction Authority (BCA).

The BCA both regulates and develops the construction industry.

The last few years have seen a renewed wave of soaring growth, led by a spike in private sector demand, with the two integrated resorts and a bumper crop of residential and commercial projects.

Construction gross domestic product (GDP) saw double-digit increases between 2007 and last year. A high of $34.6 billion worth of contracts was awarded in 2008.

Construction demand for this year is projected by BCA at between $21 billion and $27 billion. The bulk of the demand is expected to come from the public sector.

The construction industry today remains a major engine of economic growth. It contributes about 6 per cent of Singapore’s GDP, and employs 360,000 people, or roughly 12.2 per cent of the workforce.

Source : Straits Times – 13 Mar 2010

All units in phase 1 of The Vision sold out

HONG Kong developer Cheung Kong has set record selling prices for residential projects in the West Coast area.

MEETING DEMAND
The Vision will have 281 apartments and 14 strata terrace units altogether. In view of strong demand, the developer will release another 20 units of two to four-bedders for sale this weekend

It managed to sell all 100 units released in the first phase of sale for the 99-year-leasehold The Vision yesterday. Of these, two penthouses went for $3.6 million each, which works out to around $1,332 per square foot (psf).

Buyers paid around $1,000-$1,200 psf for two, three and four-bedroom units, which start from 818 sq ft in size. Cheung Kong also sold several strata terrace units, and the highest price fetched was $3.2 million.

According to the developer’s sales manager Cannas Ho, upgraders made up more than 60 per cent of the buyers, and investors accounted for the remainder.

The Vision will have 281 apartments and 14 strata terrace units altogether. In view of the strong demand, the developer will release another 20 units of two to four-bedders for sale this weekend. Cheung Kong had planned to start the second phase of sale by Q4 this year. Whether it brings the release forward will depend on market response to the project, Ms Ho said.

Take-up so far surprised some market watchers, given that The Vision’s asking prices are higher than those of other developments nearby.

One of the newer launches in the area, City Developments’ Hundred Trees, achieved prices of above $1,100 psf in recent months. But those transactions involved mainly smaller units measuring 484 sq ft, and the project has a 956-year lease.

The robust take-up of units at The Vision ’shows the strong underlying demand for mass-market homes’, said Colliers International research and advisory director Tay Huey Ying. The prices achieved could raise the value of homes in the vicinity, and provide a guide for future launches, she added.

Cheung Kong’s Ms Ho attributed The Vision’s attractiveness to ‘good location and first-class amenities’. The site is across the road from West Coast Park and the sea.

Another developer felt that prices at The Vision are not that staggering, considering the attributes of the site, and that West Coast is home to several private housing estates. The market should not see the prices as signs of a bubble forming, he said.

Nevertheless, observers will be keeping watch on prices of upcoming launches nearby. Far East Organization’s Horizon Residences, a freehold 72-unit project in the Pasir Panjang area, could be previewed in the next few weeks.

Elsewhere, the buzz is starting for property agents promoting 76 Shenton Way. Some will be presenting information on the 99-year-leasehold 202-unit project to potential buyers today. Asking prices are said to range from $1,600 psf to above $2,000 psf, depending on the level of the units.

Agents are also gathering interest for Fragrance Group’s 161-unit Parc Elegance in Telok Kurau and Novelty Group’s Primo Residences near Kovan MRT station.

Source : Business Times – 13 Mar 2010