Category Archives: Property Price

More buzz in Tanjong Pagar Chinatown area

Excitement is building up in the Tanjong Pagar neighbourhood. Property consultants attribute it to the impending launch of TP180, the 200-unit residential development within Guoco Land’s upcoming mixed-use project, Tanjong Pagar Centre. The new development boasts Singapore’s tallest tower, at 290m.

The 67-storey skyscraper will contain a mix of offices and residences, ranging from one- to four-bedroom apartments. There will also be a luxury hotel and a six-storey retail podium within the project. According to Guoco Land, TP180 is likely to be launched in 2H2013.

Given the premium location of the residential units at TP180  on the higher floors of the skyscraper and the fact that it is part of a mixed use development as well as integrated with the Tanjong Pagar MRT interchange station, prices are expected to be above $2,500 psf.

Since GuocoLand unveiled details of its much-anticipated Tanjong Pagar Centre last month, some buyers have snapped up units in other existing residential projects in the vicinity in the hopes of riding a potential upswing in prices. “Tanjong Pagar Centre is going to transform the environment of the area, and investors and home buyers are betting that prices of residential property in the vicinity will enjoy an uplift as well,” explains Samuel Eyo, director of prestige homes at Savills Singapore.

Some investors are zooming in on older freehold apartment blocks with collective sale potential and that offer a viable alternative to 99-year leasehold properties such as TP180 and most of the newer residential developments in the area, which will be completed in the next year or two. They include the 360-unit Skysuites@Anson and the 280-unit Altez on Enggor Street.

At Skysuites@Anson, the most recent transaction was that of a 1,012 sq ft unit on the 63rd level sold for close to $2.63 million ($2,596 psf) in April. At Altez, an 840 sq ft unit on the 36th level was sold for $1.96 million ($2,335 psf) also in April.

At the 10-storey 63-unit The Arris on Yan Kit Road, off Cantonment Road and Hoe Chiang Road, a 990 sq ft unit on the sixth level was sold for $1.7 million ($1,717 psf) in a transaction with a caveat lodged with URA Realis on May 28. The sixth-storey unit had been transacted three times in the past decade. It was previously bought in 2007 for $1.02 million ($1,030 psf). The unit was first sold in 2003, for $792,000 ($800 psf). The freehold apartment block was completed in 2002, and contains predominantly studio and two-bedroom units measuring 667 to 1,120 sq ft.

There have been few transactions at The Arris. The last time a unit changed hands this year was in January, when a three-bedroom unit on the 10th floor was sold for $1.7 million ($1,736 psf). Shaun Boey, an agent from ERA Realty, who is marketing a unit there, has been receiving more inquiries of late. He recently conducted three viewings in a day for the unit at The Arris. Boey says the interested buyers are a good mix of locals and foreigners, given the convenience of the location at the CBD fringe and Chinatown. “Many of them are looking to buy with the intention of occupying the unit themselves,” he observes. “However, like all homebuyers, they also want to en- sure that they will enjoy capital gains in the future.”

Farther up, in the Spottiswoode area, is the 175- unit freehold Spottiswoode Suites, a 50:50 joint venture between Lian Beng Group and Centurion Properites. The 36-storey condominium tower’s preview in mid January coincided with the government’s seventh round of property cooling measures. Yet, units have generally sold for $1,684 to $2,714 psf, the most recent transaction price at the development. It was for a 452 sq ft unit on the 28th floor, sold for more than $1.2 million at end April.

In the heart of Chinatown, ageing mixed-use development People’s Park Complex, completed in 1972, has seen four units change hands since April. What is the reason for the flurry of transactions? With only 54 years left on the 99-year lease and given that the development is old, some people believe there is potential for an en-bloc sale, says Savills’ Eyo.

“Developments such as People’s Park Complex are very old, so buyers always think there is potential for an en-bloc sale, especially given the location near the Chinatown MRT station,” says Eyo. “In the current market, where the entry level for properties in the CBD is above $2,000 psf, these older developments offer a lower price psf. Investors can collect rent while waiting for a potential en-bloc sale in the future.”

In the week of May 23 to 31, two 1,119 sq ft units at People’s Park Complex changed hands. A unit on the 26th floor was sold for $1.01 million ($902 psf); the other, located on the 22nd floor, fetched $960,000 ($858 psf).

Farther up on Eu Tong Sen Street is Pearls Centre, which was gazetted for compulsory acquisition last August to make way for the Thomson MRT Line. Owners and tenants at Pearls Centre will receive a reported compensation package of $450 million ($1,400 psf) on average. Pearls Centre was in the early stages of exploring a collective sale last August when the government’s acquisition was announced. With the upcoming Thomson Line, the Outram Park MRT station is set to become an interchange station serving three MRT lines, including the East-West and North-East Lines, which will improve the connectivity of developments in the vicinity.

According to the Singapore Real Estate Exchange, a 1,119 sq ft unit at People’s Park Complex can fetch median rentals of $4,299 a month, with a recent transaction of $4,500 a month in December. Rental rates at the complex have remained relatively steady, owing to its location next to the Chinatown MRT station, and just one stop from the Outram Park MRT station, says Aric Lim, a senior marketing director at Huttons, who is marketing a three-bed- room residential unit there.

Units at People’s Park Complex tend to be popular with mainland Chinese businessmen, as it is in the heart of Chinatown. “While the units may be pretty old, the appeal is its location,” says Lim. “The units are also easy to rent out, especially to mainland Chinese.”

Source – The Edge – 21 Jun 2013

Resale prices at Balestier hover around $1,400 psf

The Balestier Road neighbourhood is a popular haunt for those in search of food, lighting and bathroom accessories. However, it has been transformed with the opening of two major business hotels at Zhongshan Park in 1Q2013, namely the 405-room Days Hotel Singapore and the 384- room Ramada Singapore.

The neighbourhood is also benefiting from its proximity to the Novena medical cluster, with the opening of the Mount Elizabeth Novena Hospital and Specialist Centre last year, complementing the Novena Medical Centre, Tan Tock Seng Hospital and Ren Ci com-munity hospital.

Given that it’s just a short drive to the CBD and Orchard Road via the Central Expressway or the Pan Island Expressway, Balestier is increasingly popular with local and expatriate professionals and executives, as well as with skilled workers, including those in the medical profession. And even though the resale market has seen transaction volume halved compared with a year ago as a result of the latest government property cooling measures implemented on Jan 12, there has still been interest in the Balestier area.

At De Royale, a 204-unit twin-tower condominium by developer Hoi Hup, located on Jalan Rama Rama off Balestier Road, a unit changed hands for $1.72 million, or $1,343 psf, according to a caveat lodged in early April. The sale of the unit was brokered by Joyce Lau, a property agent with ERA, who has sold and rented out many of the units in the project. According to Lau, there has been a pick up in transaction and rental activity in De Royale since 4Q2012, and she attributes it to the opening of the Mount Elizabeth Novena.

Apart from its freehold tenure, the larger apartment sizes of the seven-year-old De Royale relative to the newer projects which feature mainly shoebox apartments have been a draw. The project is popular with expatriate singles and couples looking for rental apartments, according to Lau. The monthly rental of apartments in the Balestier area is lower than those in the neighbouring Novena area. For instance, asking rents for a three-bedroom unit in Novena start from $5,500 a month, while in Balestier, they are generally from $4,500, Lau notes. Despite that, investors can still expect rental yields of around 3%, even at today’s prices, in the Balestier area.

Other private condos in Balestier that have also seen some activity include The Marque @ Irrawaddy, a 48-unit boutique freehold condo project by Roxy-Pacific Holdings. The most recent transaction at The Marque @ Irrawaddy was for an 883 sq ft unit on the 11th floor that changed hands for $1.2 million, or $1,391 psf, in early April. The same unit fetched $970,000 ($1,099 psf) in August 2010.

One of the four 3-bedroom penthouses at The Marque @ Irrawaddy, which is 1,550 sq ft in size, is now on the market for lease, with an asking rent of $5,300 a month. The Marque @ Irrawaddy was completed in 2009.

New launches have also drawn investor interest to the area. The most successful launch was One Dusun Residences last August. The freehold project contains 154 apartments, with sizes ranging from 452 to 657 sq ft. There are also 76 shops, with sizes ranging from 129 to 495 sq ft. All the units were snapped up within two months. Apartments were sold for prices ranging from $1,209 to $1,832 psf, or an average of $1,700 psf.  Meanwhile, the shops were snapped up at $4,206 to $9,058 psf, according to caveats lodged with URA Realis.

Going the upmarket route is listed developer SingHaiyi Group, which is previewing its 54-unit designer loft project Cosmo Loft on Wednesday (May 1). The project is a redevelopment of the former Waldorf Mansion on Balestier Road, which the developer had purchased en bloc for $21 million in 2011. Units at CosmoLoft are priced from just under $800,000 for a 452 sq ft, onebedroom apartment to about $1.65 million for a 1,173 sq ft duplex penthouse, or an average of $1,700 psf. The development is expected to draw young and trendy buyers attracted to the loft-style units that fea- ture high ceilings, according to HSR International, the marketing agent for the project.

Source : TheEdge – 2 May 2013