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Archive for December 7th, 2008

Media Park @ One North to begin Phase 1 development next year

Posted by luxuryasiahome on December 7, 2008

First there was Biopolis; then recently, Fusionopolis was added. Next year, Singapore’s business park at One North will see its Media Park begin the first phase of development.

Details of the park’s masterplan will be released on Wednesday by Information, Communications and the Arts Minister Lee Boon Yang.

The architect behind Media Park @ One North is Bernard Tschumi, a Swiss-French now based in New York who has designed buildings all over the world for the last 25 years. The park is his first project in Singapore.

The 64-year-old first visited the republic in March this year and was impressed by its metropolitan nature, which inspired his design of the Media Park.

“How could one recreate that city feel in a neighbourhood which had a lot of offices and production studios, which is not a very lively place per se. So we invented a street system, a grid, a building, all organised around a loop, a circle, a ring,” he said.

Getting cities to intensify people-to-people interaction is what Mr Tschumi hopes the Media Park can inspire in city planners.

“When cities became settled a thousand years ago, they were not about isolation. They were not about alienation. They were about social exchange. And sometimes, architects or planners or politicians forget that… Here, we are trying to create a new vitality,” he added.

Mr Tschumi’s architectural concept aims to facilitate human communication at the park, located within the highly wired One North facility.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 7 Dec 2008

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Not all new flats are created equal

Posted by luxuryasiahome on December 7, 2008

With the HDB resale market heading south, some new flat buyers may see a paper loss

It used to be that one could never lose out buying a new HDB flat from the Government.

It was a sure-win bet to a better life for many as they sold their flats for windfall gains after five years, as allowed under HDB rules, and upgraded to newer or bigger and nicer homes.

This, however, may no longer be the case these days.

New HDB flats are subsidised and priced below those of resale flats in the same area. But there has been a shift in the market cycle, and the HDB resale market is seen heading south because of the current recession.

‘This is more or less the peak for HDB flat prices,’ said C&H Realty managing director Albert Lu.

The Housing Board has said new flat prices fall when the market goes down and vice versa, since these are priced at a discount to the market. This will be the subsidy that buyers enjoy.

While new flats have always been a safe bet, some who bought or are buying them now may find themselves with a paper loss soon.

The situation is similar to that in the previous 1996 peak. Back then, those who bought new flats in the new town of Sengkang found themselves ‘under water’ a few years later, said Mr Eugene Lim, an associate director of ERA Asia Pacific. The prices they paid were higher than those of resale flats in the area.

Experts say that as the HDB resale market slowly inches down, this scenario may present itself again. ‘Those who buy new flats when resale prices are high may have a higher probability of losing out,’ said Mr Leong Sze Hian, president of the Society of Financial Service Professionals.

‘In contrast, those who buy when resale prices are low may have a higher probability of a price appreciation. So, maybe a balanced cost-approach pricing may be better instead of market subsidy.’

The balanced cost-approach is based on pricing the cost of building the flats. It will give rise to more stable prices that reflect inflation and wage increases, he explained.

Buyers of new build-to-order flats will have to wait about three years, by which time the market may have changed completely.

They may end up in a position where their new flat’s price is similar or higher than resale prices, MrLu said.

Experts, though, are quick to add that it will be only a paper loss, if any. ‘If you don’t sell your flat, you will not see any loss,’ explained ERA’s Mr Lim. ‘There is a downside risk to buying a new flat, but it is very small.’

In any case, buyers of new flats have to occupy their units for at least five years before they can sell them. Many often continue to live in them for years after that, experts say.

In the next five to 10 years, if the world economy strengthens, the next peak for HDB flat prices may be higher than where they are right now, said Mr Lu.

There is, therefore, the possibility of a capital appreciation, but any gains will likely be smaller than before, since today’s buyers are paying a lot more for their HDB flats.

‘It’s no longer the $100,000 to $200,000 types of gains that were easily attainable in the past,’ said Mr Lim.

Mr Lu said that for those seeking a new flat to live in, it would not really matter when they buy. If they were to buy high and sell low, they would also be able to buy a replacement home at a low price, he pointed out.

Ultimately, new HDB flats remain the cheapest form of housing in Singapore.

Still, buyers have to work out their sums first.

Regardless of the economic situation or any potential capital appreciation gains, the key is to buy a flat that one can afford, experts advise.

Source : Sunday Times – 7 Dec 2008

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Sungei Buloh to create more buzz

Posted by luxuryasiahome on December 7, 2008

As a boy, Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong would wade in the muddy ponds of Sungei Buloh, trying to catch prawns with his bare hands or with a scoop.

His relative operated one of the prawn farms in the area which have since made way for the 130ha Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. ‘It was all very exciting, especially eating steamed prawns and prawn fritters for dinner,’ he recalled.

He was speaking yesterday at the reserve’s 15th-anniversary celebrations, where he also unveiled new proposals for the area, which is home to mangroves, migratory shorebirds and wildlife such as mudskippers.

The draft masterplan will see the reserve being divided into four zones. In those designated as medium to high activity, facilities such as floating boardwalks, outdoor classrooms and a children’s play area will be built.

Access to the other two zones will be kept minimal, possibly requiring the accompaniment of certified nature guides or limited only to researchers.

There are plans, too, to ‘integrate the surrounding areas so that visitors will be able to enjoy the facilities right from the Kranji area to Sungei Buloh’, said Mr Wong Tuan Wah, director of conservation at the National Parks Board, which runs the reserve.

A footpath access from Kranji Dam will be enhanced with amenities such as shelters, allowing visitors to use an alternative entry point instead of the main one at Neo Tiew Crescent.

To strengthen the park’s educational efforts, the visitor centre will be upgraded to include a new lookout tower for birdwatchers, meeting rooms and dormitory-style accommodation for research groups.

Mr Wong said some research requires overnight work, while other researchers could stay the night to prepare for early activities the following day.

A working group, with members from the Nature Society, Singapore Environment Council and national water agency PUB among others, is finalising the concept plan, which should be ready in a year’s time.

Construction work is expected to start in 2010 and end by 2013.

There are no cost estimates yet and the park hopes to double the number of visitors to 200,000 a year with the new masterplan.

The park is open from 7.30am to 7pm on weekdays and 7am to 7pm on Sundays and public holidays. Admission is free except on Saturdays, Sundays, public holidays and school holidays when adults pay $1, and kids, students and seniors 50 cents.

Visitors from Kranji MRT Station can take SMRT bus service 925 and alight at Kranji Reservoir carpark to take a 15-minute walk to the reserve. The bus stops at the reserve’s entrance on Sundays and public holidays.

Source : Sunday Times – 7 Dec 2008

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