Tag Archives: Collective Sales

Interest in residential land picks up

The year’s only collective sale tender so far has closed with more than one interested bidder, indicating demand for residential land may be returning.

Dragon Mansion, at 18 Spottiswoode Park Road, was last month the first collective sale site to be launched for sale this year.

The freehold site, which is more than 30 years old, is designated for residential use with a plot ratio of 2.8 and could potentially yield an estimated 120 units of 1,000 sq ft apartments in a new development.

CKS Property Consultants, which is marketing the site, said it saw interest from developers because ‘basically there are no freehold collective sale sites on the market right now’.

However, the firm declined to comment if the asking price of more than $120 million had been offered. Continue reading

The difference

‘Hong Kong protects minority rights while, in Singapore, money largely decides the fate of a collective sale.’

MR AUGUSTINE CHEAH: ‘As Ms Tan Hui Yee pointed out on Monday (’En bloc debate, HK style’), the key difference between Hong Kong and Singapore regarding collective property sales is that Hong Kong protects minority rights while, in Singapore, money largely decides the fate of a collective sale. One gets far more home ownership security in public housing than in expensive private housing. With more Singaporeans moving from public housing into condos, the deficiency in our collective sale laws must be addressed properly as it will affect a larger number of people in time to come. The authorities such as the Law Ministry and the Urban Redevelopment Authority have received many suggestions over the past two years, but official replies have been few. Certainly, we have not seen any changes. To proponents of the comparatively liberal collective sale laws who argue that these laws are no different from compulsory government acquisitions of the past, Ms Tan’s explanation nails the difference neatly: Private developers make a profit at the expense of someone’s home in collective sales, while government acquisition is a sacrifice made for the public good.’

Source : Straits Times – 15 Aug 2009