Tag Archives: Choa Chu Kang

More homes to be built near MRT stations

In the next decade and beyond, more homes could be built in the vacant land near MRT stations such as Commonwealth, Queenstown and Bishan, which is big enough to accommodate more than 10,000 units.

This is to meet the demand for homes in these popular areas, said National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan, who unveiled the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s Concept Plan 2011 yesterday.

The homes will be progressively built in tandem with population growth. “But this doesn’t mean we are only going to build 10,000 homes. There would be many areas where we would be releasing land for homes. The roll-out, how much land we set aside for the residential units would depend on the take up rate,” said Mr Mah.

While the concept plan – which charts Singapore’s land use and infrastructure development in the next 40 to 50 years – has factored in a population size of 6.5 million, Mr Mah said the actual size of the population in 50 years will be determined by factors such as Singapore’s economic conditions.

Beyond the mid-term, areas like Tengah will also be developed into new towns. Meanwhile, Choa Chu Kang will be further developed as early as next year and the same will be done for other existing towns like Punggol, Sengkang and Yishun, so that more homes can be built. Communal facilities like parks and places of worship will also be developed.

And to help reduce commuting times, the job-worker distribution across the island will be re-balanced.

This means injecting more housing in the central and west region, where there are proportionately more jobs than homes, while the north, which has the opposite, will see more commercial and industrial activities.

Mah responds to WP on Govt housing policy

Following the Workers’ Party’s (WP) reiteration on Wednesday that prices of new flats should be pegged to median income, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan has said that the real intent of this was to reduce prices, which would be an “asset depreciation policy”.

“All the markets are inter-linked … So, when you reduce new flat prices, there’ll be an impact on the resale flat market,” he said.

“What happens to those people who want to sell who are in mortgage arrears? What about those who are now in negative equity? These are some of the repercussions of the things that the WP is suggesting in this manifesto which they have not pointed out.”

Mr Mah, who spoke to reporters on the sidelines of the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s Corporate Seminar, said a price reduction means the Government would have to provide additional subsidies.

“Is (the money) going to come from education? From healthcare? From defence? (The WP) didn’t say. Or if they said, ‘no it’s not going to come from any of this’, are they going to raise taxes? Or are they going to dip into reserves?”

He defended the PAP’s approach: “We’re proud of the asset enhancement policy. (It) has given almost all Singaporeans a home of their own, a home that’s also an asset … that grows in value over time.”

Ten Mile Junction site draws robust bids

The first government land sale tender to close after measures were announced last Friday to cool the property market managed to draw some solid bids.

A 99-year leasehold residential site at the junction of Choa Chu Kang and Woodlands roads – which houses Ten Mile Junction – drew a top bid of $164 million or $437 per sq ft per plot ratio (psf ppr).

Far East Organization unit Dollar Land Singapore topped seven rivals with this bid.

Chip Eng Seng’s CEL Development put in the second-highest bid of $148.3 million or $395 psf ppr.

The top two bids are not too far from market predictions in early January, even though the government has just introduced anti-speculation measures – a seller’s stamp duty on residential property bought after Feb 19 and sold within a year, as well as a lower loan-to-value limit of 80 per cent for all private housing loans.

The response to the latest government land tender ’suggests that some developers think the measures will not have a significant impact in the longer term’, said Knight Frank chairman Tan Tiong Cheng.

Going by the tender results, Colliers International research and advisory director Tay Huey Ying said some developers are ‘realistically bullish’ and there is still confidence in the mass-market sector.

Still, consultants point out that competition for land seems to have eased from a few months back. Ms Tay noted that bids for sites in the second half of last year were usually much higher than expected.

Jones Lang LaSalle South-east Asia research head Chua Yang Liang noted that there was just a 10 per cent gap between the top and second bids this time around. The gap can be as large as 20-30 per cent when the market is hot, he said.

Other participants in the tender that closed yesterday included Sim Lian Group and a tie-up between Frasers Centrepoint and NTUC FairPrice Co-operative. The lowest bid came from Soilbuild Group, at $71.2 million or $190 psf ppr.

The 1.56-hectare site is occupied by the three-storey Ten Mile Junction. The first two levels comprise commercial space with a gross floor area (GFA) of 121,191 sq ft, while the third houses an LRT station.

The winning developer will gain control of the commercial component. It can also build a residential development with a GFA of 254,394 sq ft on top of Ten Mile Junction. The residential project could yield some 200 apartments.

Going by consultants’ estimates, the average selling price of the residential units could range from $700-$850 psf.

At the 99-year leasehold Mi Casa nearby, launched last year, three caveats were lodged for transactions at $658-$731 psf in January and February.

Source : Business Times – 24 Feb 2010