Moshe Safdie to design condo in Bishan

An award-winning US-based international architect has been commissioned by CapitaLand to design a condo in Bishan. Moshe Safdie is the designer behind the ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands. What does this mean for the pricing of this up-and-coming condominium project?

An internationally renowned architect with a reputation for head-turning designs has been hired for a major condominium project in Bishan.

CapitaLand's newly commissioned architect, Moshe Safdie, is the designer behind the ArtScience Museum. Image by Marina Bay Sands Singapore.

In a bold move, CapitaLand has hired United States-based award winner Moshe Safdie to help reshape the look of the heartland. Mr Safdie, whose firm designed the eye-catching ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands, has been commissioned to design the 540-unit project on the Bishan Central site.

The site, near Bishan MRT station, was acquired by CapitaLand for $550 million earlier this year. Nestled amid Bishan HDB estate, the project will consist of two 38-storey towers linked by bridging sky gardens – a world apart from the more traditional approach of individual towers for suburban condo projects.

The new condominium project will be on a site centrally located near Bishan MRT Station in Bishan HDB estate.

The 540-unit project will consist of two 38-storey towers linked by bridging sky gardens – vastly different from the more traditional approach of individual towers for suburban condo projects. The site was acquired by CapitaLand for $550 million earlier this year.

Concept design by award-winning US-based architect, Moshe Safdie, of the new CapitaLand condo project in Bishan. Image by CapitaLand.

Developers here are gradually changing the residential landscape by dazzling buyers with big-name overseas architects, say property watchers. They note that famous names such as I.M. Pei – who designed office development The Gateway in Beach Road more than 20 years ago – have long crafted commercial buildings here.

But the hiring of architects for homes is a more recent phenomenon – and has the potential to produce a major landmark dominating the Bishan area. ‘The strong architectural form of the new condominium will be a new landmark in the Bishan area, transforming its urban landscape,’ said Mr Wong Heang Fine, chief executive of CapitaLand Residential Singapore.

Mr Safdie also designed a housing project, Habitat 67 in Montreal, and Vancouver Library Square, both regarded as cutting-edge designs.

Other internationally acclaimed architects have made headlines here in recent years. For example, German architect Ole Scheeren was behind The Interlace in the Alexandra Road area, American Daniel Libeskind designed Keppel Land’s Reflections at Keppel Bay, and Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid was behind the massive 1,715-unit d’Leedon on the former HUDC Farrer Court estate.

Moshe Safdie also designed residential project, Habitat 67 in Montreal. Photo by Complexe de la cité du havre.

Still, these were mostly in the central or city fringe areas. Yet it is clear that apart from a brand name, buyers are also concerned about other factors such as pricing. None of the designer projects has sold out as yet.

The Interlace is 65 per cent sold, Reflections has found buyers for 71 per cent of its project, while d’Leedon is 23 per cent sold as of last month. Experts say enlisting a world-class architect usually means a higher selling price and can be a way for developers to overcome price resistance in certain areas by differentiating their products.

The Interlace at Depot Road - designed by German architect Ole Scheeren.

It is also rare to have renowned architects design projects in the heartland, they add, but it is the site’s location in a mature estate with amenities, such as good schools and the Bishan MRT interchange station, close by that have allowed such a concept to be viable.

Chesterton Suntec International research head Colin Tan said that as CapitaLand made a relatively high bid for the site and was likely to launch the project at a benchmark record price as well, it needed to have a key selling point.

American Daniel Libeskind is the architect behind Reflections at Keppel Bay.

‘They can’t get away with an ordinary design or a run-of-the-mill project and charge those kinds of prices. They have already got the location, so what they need now is a reason for buyers to buy, with an iconic project to push sales. ‘It’s a clever way of asking not to be compared with prices in the area because they want to be seen as different.’

Mr Tan Kok Keong, OrangeTee’s head of research and consultancy, said CapitaLand was likely to have already had the intention of building an iconic project complete with superior furnishings in its $550 million bid for the land parcel. He noted that the site’s positive attributes might allow it to sell for more than $1,400 per sq ft (psf), but for CapitaLand to price it beyond $1,500 psf would be ‘surprising’ and buyers might not bite. ‘If the market is on an upswing, it is not inconceivable for the project to sell at $1,400 psf. But apart from the ample supply going forward, which might cause price resistance, it also depends on external economic conditions.’

He said other suburban regional centres such as Jurong East could also see international names potentially making a splash in their estates in the future.

D'Leedon at King's Road is designed by Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid.

CapitaLand had set a new record for a 99-year leasehold suburban condo site with its winning bid of $869 psf per plot ratio in February. This led some experts to predict selling prices of between $1,400 psf and $1,700 psf – a new record for suburban homes.

Moshe Safdie also designed the Vancouver Library Square. Photo by DA Architects.

Experts also noted that in a competitive housing landscape with increasingly sophisticated buyers, developers have started looking beyond selling just bricks and mortar to marketing a distinguished concept or lifestyle to a global pool of buyers. And designer architects add that touch of glamour, helping to differentiate the product further.

Source: The Straits Times © Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Reprinted with permission.

Editor’s Commentary:
It was not long ago that architects could only hope to design individual homes and public housing projects. Now the landscape has changed and many more acclaimed architectural designs have dotted the local skyline. What else will whet our appetite?

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  1. [...] Owner occupiers ‘There are more of these buyers who pay high per square foot prices wanting to see the final product. They’re particular about how the project is built and finished. Developers have to realise they have to cater to owner occupiers. Gone are the days when developers could expect the market to accept whatever they built, without taking into account people’s expectations on design, style and layout. [...]

  2. [...] measure up TweetNot long ago there was news that the international award-winning architect, Moshe Safdie, was commissioned to design a condo project in Bishan. What about works by local Singaporean [...]

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