SINGAPORE – For Ms Yeeyan Chin, the $1.2 million price tag for her four-room flat on the 46th storey at Pinnacle@Duxton was well worth it.
With a view of the Central Business District, the 42-year-old executive can enjoy fireworks on special occasions – such as during National Day – from the comfort of her home.
“The main factors for me were really the view and the sense that a higher-floor unit may have stronger resale appeal over time,” added Ms Chin, who bought the unit in 2021.
Her Pinnacle@Duxton home, completed in 2009, is at present the tallest HDB development in Singapore, soaring 50 storeys high.
But this record will be surpassed by an HDB project at the foot of Pearl’s Hill that is set to rise above 60 storeys.
A BTO project at the base of Pearl’s Hill in Chinatown is set to be the tallest public housing development in Singapore with over 60 storeys.
PHOTO: HDB
The 1,700-unit Build-To-Order (BTO) project next to Outram Park MRT station, which will be launched in the next few years, was announced by National Development Minister Chee Hong Tat on March 4.
And Singapore’s skyline could see more of such super-tall public housing developments, as HDB looks for more opportunities to intensify land use and build taller blocks of flats to meet housing needs.
Driven by a healthy demand for public housing in land-scarce Singapore, the number of HDB buildings that rise 40 storeys and above has increased over the past 15 years.
There are now 119 HDB blocks across 35 projects that are at least 40 storeys high, up from 46 blocks in seven projects in 2011.
And 31 such BTO projects are currently being built, said Ms Wong Siew Ying, head of research and content at property agency PropNex Realty.
These include the 50-storey Alexandra Vale and 49-storey Redhill Peaks in Bukit Merah, both of which fall under the Prime flat classification and come with a subsidy clawback upon resale.
Most of the existing high-rise flats in such taller projects are in the central area, Queenstown and Bukit Merah.
Ms Christine Sun, chief researcher and strategist at property firm Realion (OrangeTee & ETC) Group, noted that there was a spike in transactions for such flats in 2015, when the first Pinnacle@Duxton flats hit the resale market.





