SINGAPORE – Residents in new, large-scale HDB estates
such as Tengah
and Chencharu will get coffee shops, childcare centres and bus services sooner than before.
This follows feedback that residents in such Build-To-Order (BTO) estates want such amenities to be up and running sooner.
Typically, HDB shops start operating about nine months after the first batch of residents collect their keys. It can take three months for bus services to start, and more than a year for childcare centres to be set up.
But the provision of such amenities will be brought forward to about six months after key collection, when residents start moving in, Senior Minister of State for National Development Sun Xueling said in Parliament during a debate on her ministry’s budget on March 4.
These changes will apply to estates with more than 3,000 new flats completed within five years – usually a cluster of three or four BTO projects. They are the result of work done by a committee comprising representatives from several government agencies.
Ms Sun said that over the past eight months, the BTO Coordination Committee held discussions with grassroots advisers and identified several areas of improvement.
“Every estate is different and there can be project-specific issues that cause some variation. However, with the basic principles established, we can strive towards achieving these standards for new large-scale BTO estates, and can improve the move-in experience for residents,” she said.
First, Ms Sun said HDB will support shops, including coffee shop and supermarkets, by giving them a longer rent-free period and lower rent for the first year.
This will apply to tenders for new shops from March. According to HDB’s website, upcoming tenders include shops in BTO projects like Bishan Ridges, UrbanVille @ Woodlands and Plantation Creek in Tengah.
Shop owners currently do not have to pay rent for the first two to three months.
But to address concerns over low footfall in the first few months before many residents move in, this rent-free period will be extended to up to six months for shops that open within six months of obtaining their temporary occupation permit (TOP).





