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For semi-Ds, breaking up is hard to do

Posted by luxuryasiahome on July 12, 2009

The next-door neighbour of a couple, whose bid to divorce their semi-detached house from his failed, was surprised to see his home address make the news last week.

The man, who wanted to be known only as Mr Chow, did not know that his neighbours, Madam Borissik Svetlana and her husband Low Eng Pah, went as far as the High Court to get approval to turn their semi-detached house into a bungalow.

The application was rejected by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), then a subsequent appeal was thrown out when Mr Low and Madam Svetlana took it to the courts.

‘We felt sorry for them for losing the case. We are indifferent actually. We wouldn’t have minded if they wanted to convert their house into a bungalow,’ said Mr Chow, who has been living in his two-storey house in Upper Thomson with his wife and two children for about two years now.

Current regulations require that adjoining houses each stand on at least 400 sq m of land – the minimum plot size for a detached house – before the redevelopment of semi-detached houses is allowed. The plots must also have a width of at least 10m.

Mr Low and Madam Svetlana’s semi-detached house at 2, Jalan Chengam sits on 419 sq m of land but Mr Chow’s house at 1A, Jalan Chengam has a plot size of only 244.5sq m.

The couple, who do not live in the single-storey house, had planned to convert it into a two-storey bungalow with a basement, attic and swimming pool. They declined to be interviewed.

The case has put the spotlight on a building guideline that was introduced in 1996 and revised in 2002.

The guideline allowed for existing semi-detached houses to be converted into bungalows if the minimum plot size is met. But it did not specify that a neighbouring unit had to adhere to a minimum size.

In 2002, however, URA issued a circular to professional institutes stating it had received much feedback on such conversions.

The key concern was that the redevelopment has caused the remaining half of an original pair of semi-detached units to be lopsided in appearance, the circular said.

To ensure that the adjoining semi-detached house is large enough to be redeveloped into bungalows, URA requires that its minimum plot be at least 400 sq m.

URA said it does not compile data on such applications.

A check with property consultants and construction firms showed that such breakaways, while not uncommon, are also not popular.

Mr Dennis Ng, director of DMX Construction, said he has handled only four such cases over the past 10 years.

He said neighbours are often upset by the conversion as they would have to put up with noisy construction and a ‘weird-looking’ house.

‘You seldom find both sides agreeing to redevelop at the same time,’ he said.

But Mr Dennis Wee, chairman of the realty company Dennis Wee Group, said the property value for both houses should go up as they would be classified as bungalows after the breakaway.

Still, in a soft market, it may be difficult to market ‘half a house’, he said.

‘The plot could be just over 400 sq m. That’s a bit small for a bungalow as people usually go for at least 600 sq m. It’s also not a very good sight as there will be a blank wall on one side of the house,’ he said.

Some affected home owners feel that the authorities should make it mandatory for affected neighbours to be consulted first before owners can go ahead with the redevelopment.

Under the current guidelines, applicants are ‘urged’ to keep their immediate neighbours informed of the approved plans.

Ms Phyllis Tan, who declined to reveal her age, was hurt when she found out that her neighbour, who has been her friend for 30 years, got approval to detach his single-storey semi-detached house from hers without informing her first.

She rallied 25 residents in Changi Park estate to sign a petition to the authorities.

‘I had a horrifying image of what the estate would look like in the future with several sliced-off semi-detached houses standing lopsided on their own,’ said the semi-retired lawyer, who has been living in her single-storey house for over 30 years.

Her neighbour went ahead with the conversion as the law had not been revised at that time. It was changed soon after Ms Tan’s feedback.

Today, Ms Tan said she has learnt to live with her ‘half-a-house’, even though it is dwarfed by two houses on both sides. The wall that used to connect her house with her neighbour’s, which is now a 21/2-storey bungalow, is concealed by a tall chiku tree.

While she remains friends with her neighbour, she is troubled that the law does not give affected home owners any defined rights over the approval of such upgradings.

‘The neighbour is affected by the breakaway and deserves to be consulted. It’s just common courtesy.’

But others feel home owners have the right to do what they please with their own house.

Mrs Chow from 1A, Jalan Chengam said: ‘It is private property after all. If the neighbours don’t like it, it will pile pressure on the owners. Not everyone is indifferent like us.’

Source : Sunday Times – 12 Jul 2009

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Prime properties starting to stir

Posted by luxuryasiahome on June 26, 2009

The landed housing market has been particularly active in the past month.

At Bowmont Gardens in Frankel Estate in the east,a terrace house with a land area of 1,539 sq ft was sold for $950,000, or $617 psf, last month. According to caveats lodged with URA Realis, this property changed hands three times in the last three years. It was sold at $938,000 in May 2007 and $800,000 in January 2007.

At Duchess Avenue, in the Bukit Timah area, a semi-detached house with a land area of 3,584 sq ft was sold at $3.3 million, or $922 psf. The house had been purchased for $1.9 million in 2004. Another house along the same street with a slightly larger land area of 3,649 sq ft was sold at $3.4 million. The seller had bought it for $2.38 million in 2000.

In the bungalow segment, a Good Class Bungalow in Astrid Hill with a land area of 21,119 sq ft was sold for $13 million ($616 psf) last month. The last transaction for that same property was a year ago, when it changed hands for $13.8 million.

Several bungalows in the Trevose area off Dunearn Road in prime district 11 changed hands for over $1,000 psf. At Trevose Crescent, a bungalow with a land area of 6,598 sq ft was sold for $8.28 million, or $1,254 psf, last month. The previous owner had purchased the property for $6.4 million in 2007. Nearby, at Jalan Bahasa, a bungalow sitting on a land area of around 5,000 sq ft was sold in the resale market for $5.7 million, or $1,139 psf.

Four detached houses were sold en bloc at Toh Avenue, off Upper Changi Road. The four homes occupy a land area totalling 40,526 sq ft, and changed hands for $13.37 million in the resale market.

In the city area, properties such as Icon near Tanjong Pagar MRT station continue to see strong activity. At the 646 unit Icon, completed in 2007, based on caveats from May 22 to 29, at least four units changed hands, with prices in the $1,340 psf range. For instance, a 904 sq ft unit on the 23rd floor of Icon was sold at $1.22 million, or $1,348 psf. According to past caveats, the seller had originally purchased the apartment for $646,720, or $715 psf, in 2003, when the project was first launched, hence seeing capital appreciation of close to 89%.

Over at Marina Bay, a unit on the 38th floor of The Sail@Marina Bay was sold for $2.059 million, or $2,199 psf, in the resale market.

The property was first purchased at $908,424, or $970 psf, in 2004 when the 1,111-unit residential skyscraper was first launched. This represents a gain of about 100% for the buyer. Another unit on the second floor purchased at $1.119 million, or $1,040 psf, during the launch in 2005 was sold for $1.452 million, or $1,349 psf, last month. It’s clear that sellers who had bought units in the development when the first tower was launched in 2004, and the second a year later, are seeing attractive returns on their investment.

Source : The Edge – 22 Jun 2009

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Widjaja family member buys Cree Court for $53m

Posted by luxuryasiahome on June 24, 2009

THE Good Class Bungalow (GCB) market continues to buzz with activity.

Frankle Widjaja, a member of the family that controls the Sinar Mas group, is understood to have recently inked a deal to buy Cree Court along Dalvey Road.

Mr Widjaja, who sits on the boards of Asia Food & Properties and Golden Agri-Resources, is said to have signed a sale and purchase agreement to buy Cree Court for about $53 million, which works out to slightly over $800 per square foot based on the site’s freehold land area of 65,416 sq ft.

Cree Court is a four-storey development comprising 12 apartments. The site is in a designated Good Class Bungalow Area, which means that it can be redeveloped only into GCBs.

Based on the minimum plot size of 1,400 square metres (about 15,069 sq ft) stipulated for a GCB, the Cree Court site can be redeveloped into a maximum of four GCBs. Of course, Mr Widjaja may also develop a single luxurious bungalow on sprawling grounds, a market watcher suggested.

The seller is The Asia Life Assurance Society, part of Tokio Marine & Nichido Fire Insurance Co group. The sale is understood to have been brokered by Peter Ng of HRL Properties and Helen Li.

The $53 million fetched for Cree Court under the recent deal is lower than the $58 million that another party had agreed to pay last year for the property. However, that deal was aborted a few months later, with the buyer forfeiting a deposit of least 10 per cent of the purchase price, BT understands.

That unsuccessful buyer is understood to be an entity linked to Agus Anwar, a Singaporean businessman linked to Kapital Asia Pte Ltd, an investment holding company.

Asia Life Assurance Society bought Cree Court in 2000 from DBS Bank for $24.07 million or $368 psf.

The bank had sold the asset as part of its strategy of divesting non-core assets.

Cree Court’s latest buyer, Mr Widjaja, runs his family’s China property business and is credited with spearheading the development of the Sinar Mas group’s Westin Bund Center in Shanghai.

Source : Business Times – 24 Jun 2009

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Top-end bungalow prices rise as sales revive

Posted by luxuryasiahome on June 21, 2009

Action star Jet Li, who recently bought a good class bungalow (GCB) in Binjai Rise for $19.8 million, will have new neighbours as the market for GCBs continues to pick up over the next few months.

Property agents say they are expecting to close more deals.

‘I expect to sell six to eight out of the 15 good class bungalows on hand within six months,’ said Mr K.H.Tan, managing director of property firm Newsman Realty.

ERA property agent George Lee is singing the same tune. He expects to sell two GCBs in the next two months, while negotiations for a couple of deals are under way for Mr Steven Ming, Savills’ director for prestige homes.

It was, however, a different story at the start of the year, after the fall of Lehman Brothers which crippled the world economy late last year.

Total residential investment sales, including GCBs, plunged by 60.7 per cent in the first quarter of this year from the last quarter of last year.

Mr Lee had no GCB sales at the start of the year.

According to Savills Singapore’s analysis of caveats captured by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) Realis system, there were only two transactions in the first quarter of this year, a figure which picked up to seven transactions in April and last month.

Home to high-profile businessmen and now, at least one international celebrity, GCBs are high-end bungalows worth at least $10 million that sit on a minimum plot size of 15,069 sq ft. There are about 2,400 GCBs in the 39 areas gazetted by the URA.

Popular GCB addresses include Nassim, Cluny, Bishopsgate and White House Park estates.

While the restrictions for Singaporeans to own GCBs are only the size of their pockets, applications by permanent residents (PRs) to buy these houses are assessed on a case-by-case basis, depending on their contribution to Singapore.

Owners are allowed to build only up to two storeys.

Foreigners are not allowed to own GCBs.

As a sign of recovery, the average price per sq ft (psf) for GCBs has increased by 10 per cent to 15 per cent in the last month, said Mr Tan of Newsman Realty.

In January, it cost $800 to $1,000 psf for a new house in District 10. Now, it has risen to between $1,000 and $1,200 psf, said the agent who is handling the sale of 2, Swettenham Road, which belongs to Mr George Quek, founder and chairman of bakery chain BreadTalk.

‘Buyers find GCBs a safer form of investment than putting money in a bank. The return of 2 per cent is higher than the bank’s 1 per cent,’ said Mr Tan.

An influx of rich foreigners who eventually settle down here will also drive up the demand for GCBs.

‘With more and more rich foreigners becoming citizens and PRs, the demand for GCBs is expected to drive prices up by 30 per cent in the next three years,’ Mr Tan added.

To yield a good investment, buyers tend to look out for GCBs that are situated in the prime districts of 9, 10, 11 and 21, on elevated land, have a wide frontage and a 360-degree unblocked view.

Despite the market recovery and assurance of high returns, one GCB resident will not be selling her house any time soon.

Ms Werny Drahma, 32, loves her 18,000 sq ft Leedon Park house which she shares with her parents, three siblings, her husband, their two children and four maids. Her father is the chairman of commodity trading firm Wilson Global Trade.

‘I love that I can have my personal space,’ said the Indonesian- born ethnic Chinese, who is now a Singapore citizen.

The house was registered under Ms Drahma’s name in 2002. Back then, it cost her parents less than $10 million, and she estimates that the value has appreciated by about 50 per cent.

The upkeep of the house – including electricity bill and maintenance for swimming pool, koi pond, aquarium and garden – comes to several thousand dollars a month.

The Drahmas’ sprawling home is the result of her father’s hard struggles, she said.

‘My father came from a small town in Indonesia and was very poor. He had only high school education. But by perseverance, he managed to make it big by his 30s,’ said Ms Drahma.

Source : Sunday Times – 21  Jun 2009

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Top-end bungalows going, going, gone

Posted by luxuryasiahome on June 18, 2009

7 good class bungalows sold in April and May, more deals in the works

The most prestigious segment of Singapore’s residential property sector has picked up over the past two months.

Hot sale: Movie star Jet Li bought this Binjai Rise bungalow last month for $19.8m

Seven good class bungalows (GCBs) were sold in April and May – up from just two transactions in Q1 2009 – according to Savills Singapore’s analysis of caveats captured by URA Realis.

The numbers are for bungalows with the minimum plot size of 1,400 square metres (about 15,069 square feet) stipulated for GCBs in the 39 GCB areas (GCBAs) here gazetted by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA). However, if bungalows with land areas below 1,400 sq m are also included, the April-May period saw 10 caveats – again significantly higher than the three caveats lodged in Q1.

‘The higher GCB sales in April and May reflect the general improvement in investment sentiment on the back of the stockmarket rally. Some GCB buyers could also be savvy investors who made money in the stock market. Going ahead, they may feel that there’s more upside than downside for GCB prices,’ says Savills’ director for prestige homes Steven Ming.

The biggest GCB transaction in May (and also so far this year) was the $30 million sale of 2A Ridley Park, which has 27,233 sq ft land area. The price works out to $1,101 per square foot (psf) of land area – also the highest on a unit land price basis in 2009.

At least one other transaction has been done at above $1,000 psf recently, although it has yet to be reflected in caveats: 1 Cluny Hill, which was sold for $16.2 million or $1,081 psf based on its 14,985 sq ft plot size. Forbes Property Realty Network brokered the deal.

Douglas Wong, director, luxury homes at CB Richard Ellis, notes that GCB investors in Singapore often own two or more such properties – one for their own residence and the rest for investment. ‘With the recent increase in activity, they may consider it opportune to liquidate some of their GCB holdings and get some cash back to plough into other investments or their business,’ he said.

Compared with just three GCB transactions in Q1, Mr Wong expects some 14-17 deals in Q2. ‘Assuming the stock market is able to hold up till the end of 2009, we estimate that some 38-45 GCBs could be sold for the whole of 2009, amounting to a total quantum of some $700-800 million,’ he added. This would not be far off from the $827 million from the sale of 51 GCBs last year.

Other notable GCB transactions in May include a property at Jervois Road that sold for $13 million ($862 psf), and another bungalow at Binjai Rise that was sold for $19.8 million ($871 psf) to international action star Jet Li.

The highest ever psf price attained for a bungalow in a GCB area is $1,899 psf for 32H Nassim Road in October 2007. But the area of that plot is 13,423 sq ft, less than the minimum GCB plot size. That’s why the GCB benchmark is generally considered $1,308 psf – the price obtained for 15 White House Park, with 22,012 sq ft land area, in August 2007.

Activity in the landed housing market first started picking up this time around in the ‘low-end’ segment – meaning terraced and semi-detached houses – about three months ago, said Michael French, MD of Asia Premier Property Consultants.

‘We have not seen such buying levels in the market for a long time,’ he said.

The activity then filtered up to smaller bungalows of about 4,000-8,000 sq ft. Then, about four weeks ago, demand for GCBs took off, with several large deals being concluded in May.

More big GCB deals are on the cards. BreadTalk founder and chairman George Quek is looking to sell his 2 Swettenham Road GCB and the price tag could be as high as $33 million, or $991 psf. Mr Quek bought the property, with 33,293 sq ft land area, with his wife last year for $27 million or $811 psf. He has appointed Newsman Realty to handle the sale, and the firm’s managing director, KH Tan, hopes to get $33 million for the 1960s bungalow.

The property will be sold through a closed tender on June 30. Mr Tan has pre-selected 30 prospective buyers whom he intends to invite to view the property and to participate in the bidding exercise. Part of the proceeds from the sale will be donated to charity.

Source : Business Times – 18  Jun 2009

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Jet Li buys $20m bungalow in Bukit Timah

Posted by luxuryasiahome on June 18, 2009

MARTIAL arts movie star Jet Li and his wife, former actress Nina Li Chi, have bought a sprawling bungalow in Bukit Timah for $19.8 million.

The freehold property is a 22,723 sq ft good class bungalow (GCB) in Binjai Rise – a house with past links to another global celebrity, football star David Beckham.

GCBs are a prestigious class of bungalows in limited supply here, found only in gazetted prime residential areas such as Nassim Road and Ridley Park. They have a minimum land area of 15,000 sq ft.

Li, 46, who is taking a break from acting to focus on charity work, launched the Jet Li One Foundation Project in April last year jointly with the Red Cross Society of China to raise funds for victims of natural disasters worldwide.

The Beijing-born actor, whose Chinese name is Lianjie, then set up a branch of One Foundation in Singapore last year.

In 2007, he had moved his wife and two younger daughters to Singapore. He is now understood to be a Singapore citizen, according to the Business Times, which broke news of the sale yesterday.

The two younger daughters – he has two other teenage daughters from an earlier marriage – attend the Singapore American School.

Li, who previously lived in Los Angeles, has starred in numerous Hollywood and Chinese movies. Recent releases include The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor (2008) and Fearless (2006).

His first Hollywood leading role was in the hip hop, gongfu film Romeo Must Die.

A check yesterday showed that Li’s GCB deal was sealed in the middle of last month. The seller had suffered a loss of $1.2 million on the deal.

The seller, who has a pre-school childcare business, had bought the property in the fast-rising market of early 2007 for $21 million, or $924 per sq ft (psf). The sale price to Li works out to $871 psf.

Market sources said the previous owner had bought it from the founder of luxury goods retailer FJ Benjamin, Mr Frank Benjamin, who had lived there for many years. He now lives in the high-rise condominium Ardmore Park.

In 2001, Mr Benjamin hosted a party at this Binjai Rise house, where two models claimed in media reports to have met football star David Beckham and later had separate trysts with him. The football star did not comment on the allegations.

Market observers said the price that Li paid for the GCB is fair. With prices rising amid improved property market sentiment, the value of the Binjai Rise GCB could even be a bit higher now, said one.

Li’s purchase and the 2007 deal are the only occasions the bungalow has changed hands since 1995 – the period when records are available.

Foreigners cannot easily buy a GCB or any other landed home here as the Government restricts foreign ownership of residential property.

Permanent residents are permitted to buy landed property, but only with permission from the Government. Foreigners who take out Singapore citizenship may also buy landed property.

The exception to the restrictions is the gated residential enclave of Sentosa Cove, where ownership rules were eased to allow foreigners who are not PRs to buy landed homes or land plots, though permission is still needed.

Other Asian movie stars living in Singapore include Chinese actress Gong Li, who is married to a Singaporean. She became a Singapore citizen late last year.

Another famous gongfu star, Jackie Chan, also owns properties here, though he is not based here.

Source : Straits Times – 18 Jun 2009

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Jet Li buys $20m Binjai Rise bungalow

Posted by luxuryasiahome on June 17, 2009

Tommie Goh acquires GCB from neighbour Sam Goi

Action star Jet Li seems to be sinking deeper roots in Singapore. He and his wife, Nina, bought a good class bungalow (GCB) on Binjai Rise for $19.8 million last month. The price works out to $871 per square foot based on the freehold land area of 22,723 square feet.

Mr Li is understood to have become a Singapore citizen.

Last year, he announced plans to set up a base in Singapore for his charity and disaster-relief group One Foundation. The Jet Li One Foundation Singapore was registered in June 2008.

Mr Li had said at the Forbes Global CEO Conference here in September last year that Singapore offers the right conditions for grooming future NGO leaders.

He was spurred to set up his charitable foundation after a narrow escape from the 2004 tsunami. According to earlier media reports, Mr Li moved his two daughters and wife to Singapore in 2007 for his children’s education.

The Beijing-born Mr Li led a life of hardship as a child (his father died when he was two) but persevered to emerge as China’s overall national wushu champion for five consecutive years in the 1970s. He began his acting career in the early 1980s, starting with Shaolin Temple and today has about 40 movies under his belt.

Mr Li became a US citizen in the 1980s.

When contacted, a spokeswoman for Singapore’s Immigration and Checkpoints Authority declined to confirm if Mr Li is now a Singapore citizen. ‘Due to reasons of confidentiality, the ICA will not discuss individual cases publicly,’ she said.

Mr Li was not the only luminary who picked up a GCB here in May.

2G Capital co-founder Tommie Goh bought 2A Ridley Park, next to his existing home, for $30 million or slightly over $1,100 psf.

The seller was ‘popiah king’ Sam Goi, executive chairman of Tee Yih Jia Food Manufacturing and an established investor in the GCB market.

Mr Goi is expected to move to a new palatial home that he has built on Nassim Road. BT understands that the two neighbours had been discussing the sale of 2A Ridley Park on and off for the past few years.

GCBs, with their stringent planning requirements, are the creme de la creme of Singapore’s housing market. There are only about 2,400 such bungalows on the island.

Source : Business Times – 17  Jun 2009

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Villa La Vue @ SigLap View

Posted by luxuryasiahome on June 4, 2009

Villa La Vue

Freehold
7 Units of Bungalows of 3 Storey+ Basement Cluster Housing Development
Expected TOP : End 2010
===================================================================================

Exclusive Landed Living with Facilities in Siglap
(East Central Region Most Sought After Location)
Private Preview starts on VIA Appointment only
===================================================================================

Special  UOB Bank Loan Package
Interest Absorption Scheme : 5% +15% and nothing till TOP with special UOB BANK loan package!!
( As good as deferred!! )

===================================================================================

EACH Bungalows comes with
4 Bedrooms + Maids Room + Entertainment Room
(Excellent for Family of all ages)
From 3972 SqFt to 5102 Sqft

Priced to Sell!!
$2.8X Mil onwards !!   PSF : $5xx to $7xx psf

===================================================================================
Selling Points !!

With excellent access to CBD & Changi Airport via ECP/PIE/KPE/Nicholl HighWay
8 to 10 Mins Walk to Kembangan MRT
Sitting On The Highest Plot of Land in Siglap
Excellent Opportunity for Capital Appreciation as Landed Property in Siglap cost more than $3.5 Million Easily
Comes with Facilities : Swimming Pool, Jacuzzi ,Gym & BBQ
Within 1 km to St Stephen’s Primary School
Within Walking Distance to Siglap Eateris & Siglap Centre
Near to EAST COAST PARK

Email lushhome@gmail.com with the following for more information or an appointment:

Villa La Vue / Name / Contact # / Unit Type Interested

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Bungalow brokers pitch in

Posted by luxuryasiahome on May 16, 2009

With market sentiment improving, transaction activity has picked up and bungalow owners, particularly those of GCBs, are readjusting prices upwards. They are turning to top bungalow specialists to achieve their target prices.

WITH THE STOCK market recovering and the benchmark Straits Times Index gaining 17.7% since April 28 and 46% since its low on March 9, sentiment in the property market has also improved markedly. All this has translated into a pick-up in transaction volume in the bungalow segment, and even renewed interest in the Good Class Bungalow segment in the past two weeks.

Marketing agent and bungalow specialist K H Tan, 46, is pushing the envelope on GCB sales. A fortnight ago, he persuaded the owner of an original 1960s bungalow perched on a hilltop with a long, winding driveway at 2 Swettenham Road that his property was worth $1,000 psf. Thus, the single-storey bungalow, which sits on a freehold land area of 33,293 sq ft, has a guide price of $33 million.

A property-title search found that the house belongs to George Quek, founder and chairman of BreadTalk, and his wife, Katherine Lee. A caveat lodged with URA Realis last July showed that the purchase price was $27 million, or $811 psf. Today, the indicative price is $1,000 psf.

Tan, the marketing agent, has been a specialist in the marketing and selling of GCBs for the last five years and brokered many of the high-profile bungalow transactions in the $20 million range. “I’m quite selective about the bungalows I sell,” he says.

The largest GCB transaction Tan has ever done was that of a bungalow at Victoria Park, which has a freehold land area of 32,077 sq ft. It was sold for $29.5 million, or $920 psf, in mid-2007 at the peak of the property boom. That was a record high in the GCB segment in terms of quantum price. He also brokered the sale of niche developer George Lim’s two newly built luxury GCBs — Nos 37 and 39 Leedon Road — which were sold for $25 million and $27.5 million respectively last year. He is now the marketing agent for Lim’s bungalow at 6 Leedon Park, which has an indicative price of $21 million.

Not the typical property agent decked out in a smart suit or shirt and tie, Tan has not worn a tie in 15 years. Instead, he wears a necklace with a jade Kuan Yin pendant.

Tan attributes his success to his intuition, or what he calls his “sixth sense in predicting the property market accurately”. An early riser, he wakes up at 4.30 every morning and, by 5am, he is already at the Botanic Gardens for his one-hour walk. “It’s during these walks that I get some of my best ideas for marketing a property or on bungalow designs for my clients,” he says.

Tan is not opening the sale of the house at 2 Swettenham Road to just anyone who can afford it, but is pre-selecting 30 prospective clients whom he intends to invite to view the property and to participate in a closed tender for the GCB on June 18. His criteria are based on not just a client’s net worth and prominence but also on whether the individual is a philanthropist. Tan, who is also managing director of Newsman Realty, says he has already received a dozen offers from those who have viewed the property.

He wants to link the sale of the bungalow to a charity drive to raise funds for the KK Hospital Health Endowment Fund. He is also looking at charging a $1,000 fee for each tender document, and all proceeds from the sale will go to the fund. On top of that, both the owner and Tan have agreed to a target price, and anything beyond that amount will be donated to the fund. Tan is also pledging a portion of his commission from the sale towards the fund.

The other reason for pre-selecting prospective buyers for the Swettenham Road bungalow is that Tan hopes the new buyer will retain the façade of the original 1960s house. The current property has a total built-up area of just 3,400 sq ft, comprising a main house with three bedrooms, and a study attached to the master bedroom. A separate, smaller building, used as a guest house, has a bedroom and a living room. If the new owner wants to add more bedrooms to the house, there is room for a new extension at the back, which can bring the total built-up area to 5,000 sq ft if maintained as a single-storey bungalow, adds Tan. The idea is to ensure that the façade of the new extension is consistent with the design of the existing property.

TRANSACTIONS UP, ASKING PRICES BACK TO EARLY 2OO7 LEVELS?

Transactions in the GCB market, which had languished for much of the year, have also picked up in recent weeks as sentiment turned more positive. Just last week, Tan handled the sale of a GCB in Binjai Park, with a freehold land area of 22,000 sq ft, for $19.8 million. A GCB in Cluny Hill with a freehold land area of 37,039 sq ft recently received an offer of $30 million, but the owner turned it down as he intends to tear down the existing bungalow and build a mansion on the sprawling site. According to caveats lodged with URA Realis, the property had changed hands three times in the last two years. The first was in January 2007 for $15 million, the second was in June that year for $20.2 million, and the third time was in May last year, when it was resold for $21.5 million. Another bungalow with a 19,000 sq ft freehold area at Cluny Hill was also said to have changed hands a week or two ago for $17.67 million, or $930 psf, according to sources.

At Jervois Road, a GCB with a land area of 15,070 sq ft was reportedly sold for an undisclosed amount. The last time the property changed hands was in 2004, for $8.45 million, or $561 psf. Over at Jalan Bahasa, a row of new three-storey detached homes has also been put on the market. The developer is said to be niche luxury bungalow developer Satinder Garcha of Elevation Developments. One of the bungalows at Jalan Bahasa, with a land area of 4,308 sq ft and built-up area of 5,300 sq ft, was recently sold for $5.8 million and another for $6.5 million. According to market sources, a GCB at Astrid Hill with a land area of 21,119 sq ft and which changed hands last year for $13.8 million was recently sold for $13 million.

Tan is also marketing Elevation’s brand-new GCB at 8E Gallop Road, which has a total builtup area of 9,000 sq ft and freehold land area of 16,000 sq ft. The newly completed bungalow has six bedrooms and an entertainment room. The owner, who has received five offers so far, ranging from $16 million to $18.5 million, is said to be holding to the asking price of $19 million to $20 million.

A new benchmark price for top-end GCBs could be set if Tan successfully concludes the sale of GCBs with price tags above $30 million. Apart from 2 Swettenham, Tan is also the marketing agent for a GCB in Cluny Park. The bungalow has a large freehold land area of 37,000 sq ft and the owner has an indicative price of $39 million. The owner recently received an offer of $33 million, but he has turned it down and is sticking to his asking price.

Other bungalow specialists have also noted a pick-up in sentiment and activity. What is clear is that sellers have also revised their asking prices upwards. “This week, every owner has raised his price,” says Michael French, managing director of Asia Premier Property Consultants. “I’ve an SMS here,” he adds, pointing to his mobile phone. “The owner’s asking price has jumped from $13 million to $17 million. The stock market has risen 300 to 400 points but fundamentals haven’t changed. But suddenly, everyone has this kind of money to buy?”

Sentiment has certainly turned positive, though. French says the landed-home segment — from terraced houses to small bungalows with land parcels of up to 10,000 sq ft — has been buzzing in the past fortnight. “Buyers have been queuing up to give agents cheques,” he says. Why? “Because they are afraid if they don’t buy now, prices will go up further next quarter.”

French reckons that the pick-up in activity is sustainable, but his only fear is that it may get derailed by an unexpected event. So far, the STI has shrugged off fears over the swine flu, and both the stock and property markets have chugged along. “In 4Q1999 to 1Q2000, the market was in a bull run,” recalls French. “But after the tech stock bubble burst in March 2000, the Singapore [property] market sank and never quite recovered [until three years ago]. This could be repeated because fundamentals are absent even as people talk about the ‘green shoots’ of economic recovery.”

Called “the bungalow king” by a newspaper in 2000, French, who was born in Singapore to British parents, has adopted the moniker ever since, and even his website address is BungalowKing.net. He has been specialising in the GCB market since 1995, and started with a small property firm called Challenger Properties before moving to Chesterton International. “There was a joke going around at that time, and they used to say, ‘When Michael French walks into Chesterton, the whole building shakes,’” he says. “I don’t know whether it was the feng shui or market conditions but, at Chesterton, I was closing almost one GCB sale a month and, I would say, I was the No 1 agent in the whole of Chesterton.” He was there from 1998 to 2000, before he left and set up Asia Premier in 2000.

‘DOG-EAT-DOG WORLD’

With the improved market sentiment and pickup in activity, agents are also increasingly seeing other agents jumping in even after the option agreement on a property has been signed and telling the owner that he or she can get a better price for the GCB. “This is a very common practice in the market,” says French. “The property market is a dog-eat-dog world because the stakes are very high. You do one transaction, there can be $100,000 to $500,000 [in commission] on the table. So, when you’re there, you have to close the deal as quickly as possible, even if you have to get the option signed at midnight or 1am. You must get him to sign [the option].

“[Otherwise], as soon as the owner tells another agent he has an offer, the agent will say, ‘I can bring you half a million or another million dollars more,’ and then the owner will suddenly panic, and everything will be on hold. That’s very common. It’s already started. Agents are now coming in, and every owner is now raising prices.”

William Wong, RealStar Premier Property Consultant’s managing director, has also noticed this phenomenon, which he says is very common especially in a rising market. “So, we always talk about a concrete cheque offer,” he says. “Everybody can tell you what price they can get, but can they get a cheque offer? It’s very common practice in the real-estate industry, especially in the high-end bungalow and GCB segment.”

Since 2004, Wong’s RealStar has been specialising in the landed-housing segment and mainly bungalows in the prime districts of 9, 10 and 11, as well as in the east, in Districts 15 and 16, and the GCBs in Binjai Park and Yarwood area in District 21. Last week, it reported a 40% increase in the number of landed- home transactions in April compared with the previous month. This spike comes on the back of the firm’s sale of semi-detached properties on Boscombe and Warehome Roads in the east in early April. “Within three weeks of the launch, we are left with only two units at Wareham Road, with all four units at Boscome sold out,” says Wong. The most recent transacted price was $3.25 million for a semi-detached house at Boscombe Road.

In the last two months, Wong has also seen the asking price for a bungalow in Cluny Park increase to $15.6 million recently, from $12 million. “Surprisingly, [asking prices] have gone up again, and they’ve gone up earlier than expected,” he says. “It’s good because, over the last couple of months, the number of transactions has also gone up.”

IS THIS TREND SUSTAINABLE?

Wong attributes the rise in prices partly to the recovery in the stock markets. Three to four months ago, the entry level for GCBs was $10 million to $11 million, observes Wong. Buyers are realising that the entry level has increased from $10 million previously, and are now prepared to adjust their offer price to between $11 million and $12 million, he notes. “But sellers are not accepting them yet,” he acknowledges. “Prices are back to levels seen in early 2007. And it’s also starting to happen in the smaller-bungalow segment.”

In Holland Grove, for instance, the owner of an 8,000 sq ft bungalow with an asking price of $6.8 million has received an offer of $6.6 million, which normally would have been accepted, but has turned it down. Wong says: “These days, we will convey to buyers that, from what we understand, a few days ago, the seller’s asking price was this much, but now it may have been adjusted. So, we manage the buyers’ expectations in case they get disappointed when they offer a price, and find that the seller has since adjusted it upwards again. It’s almost like chasing a moving target.”

Most recently, RealStar brokered the sale of a bungalow at Dyson Road with a land area of 9,000 sq ft for $6.8 million. Wong is also marketing a GCB in Leedon Park with a land area of 15,500 sq ft and asking price of $13 million. Another GCB, with a land area of 15,000 sq ft on Dalvey Road, has an asking price of $18 million. “These days, the asking price for GCBs is back to about $1,000 psf,” says Wong. For Wong, the good news is that buyers have also upped their offer prices in tandem with owners’ prices. “I foresee the transaction volume should be pretty good for the next few months,” he adds. “It’s partly due to the stock market.”

Wong has also noticed that medium-sized developers are again on the lookout for redevelopment land — for both landed homes as well as apartments and condominiums.

Newsman’s Tan plans to conquer new territory — Sentosa Cove — in the next six months. He says some developers have already invited him to market their bungalows there. Two years ago, the prices of 99-year leasehold Sentosa Cove bungalow parcels had even exceeded those of freehold GCBs in the traditional prime districts, and Tan believes there is “a high possibility” that it will happen again when the integrated resorts are ready, and the market stabilises. “So, I think Sentosa prices will go up in two years,” he says.

He estimates that, by then, seafront bungalows will command $1,500 to $1,800 psf, while non-seafront bungalows will see prices of $1,200 to $1,300 psf. As for bungalows that face golf courses, such as Elevation Golf Villas, Tan thinks that, given the exclusivity and the fairways facing bungalows with basement parking, bungalows there could command up to $2,000 psf. With that optimism, Tan hopes he will also set new benchmark prices at Sentosa Cove, just like he did in the prime GCB market.

Source : The Edge – 16 May 2009

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Dunsfold and Matlock Residences in Braddell Height Estate

Posted by luxuryasiahome on May 5, 2009

Dunsfold & Matlock Res

The Braddell Heights Estate is an elevated enclave of bungalow homes, conveniently located near the Central Expressway (CTE)/Braddell Road junction. Minutes to the amenities at Serangoon Gardens, Bishan and Ang Mo Kio town centre, and yet retaining all the charm of an exclusive landed community.

Dunsfold Residences and Matlock Residences are cluster bungalows located in Dunsfold Drive and Matlock Rise respectively. each bungalow comes with a private jacuzzi pool and is within close distance to the Australian School! Marble, wood and other materials are carefully selected to harmoniously blend together with the environs. Imported European sanitary wares, Japanese air-conditioning systems, and sleek designer kitchens are standard. Attention to details and stringent quality control by developer ACT-Nobel Homes ensure that the purchaser can relax and be sure of getting a quality product.

- TOP 31 December 2011
- Total 12 units (6 each)
- Freehold
- Private Jacuzzi Pool
- Interest Absorption Scheme Available (IAS)

DUNSFOLD RESIDENCES: (All 5+1 bdrm)
* Type A (1 unit) – Strata Area 6329 sq ft
* Type A1 (1 unit) – Strata Area 6038 sq ft
* Type B (2 units) – Strata Area 5737 sq ft
* Type C (2 units) – Strata Area 6232 sq ft

MATLOCK RESIDENCES:
* Type A (1 unit) – Strata Area 6049 sq ft (4+1 bdrm)
* Type A1 (1 unit) – Strata Area 5694 sq ft (4+1 bdrm)
* Type B (2 units) – Strata Area 5435 sq ft (5+1 bdrm)
* Type C (2 units) – Strata Area 5295 sq ft (5+1 bdrm)

Contact us at lushhome@gmail.com for more information.

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