Glitches at Grangeford
Sub-dividing of 140 apartments into 600 units runs into issues with
URA
A mild controversy of sorts is developing at the Grangeford condo at
Leonie Hill.
A fully owned subsidiary of Overseas Union Enterprise has signed a
two-year lease with a master tenant for 170 apartments at the condo which
OUE clinched through an en bloc sale.

The view inside: The sub-divided units at Grangeford condo have
the distinct feel of a dormitory, leading to complaints being made to the
authorities
Of the 170 apartments, master tenant Ideal Accommodation has just
completed sub-dividing 140 apartments into a total of 600 units. It has
found takers for about half of the units. Ideal Accommodation is asking
monthly rents of $900 to $1,400 per unit. Each unit comes furnished with a
bed, washing machine, an LCD TV and Internet connection.
However, the sub-division has left most of the units with unventilated
corridors and without access to rubbish chutes. Owners of some units have
to share toilets. The sub-divided units have the distinct feel of a
dormitory, leading to complaints being made to the authorities.
When contacted, a spokeswoman for Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA)
said: ‘We have recently received feedback on an unauthorised change of use
of the residential apartments (at Grangeford Apartments) to boarding
house/dormitory use. This cannot be allowed as the Master Plan zoning for
this site is for residential use only.
‘URA has not received any application for the conversion of Grangeford
Apartments to other non-residential use.’
The planning authority also said it has contacted the owner to seek
clarification. ‘URA (and) other government agencies will take the
necessary enforcement action against the person responsible on any
unauthorised use and for not complying with the requirements,’ she added.
OUE’s CEO Thio Gim Hock said: ‘If URA says this cannot be done, we will
comply with their requirements. If instructed by the authorities, Ideal
may then have to remove the partitions and restore the units to their
original apartment condition and they are then still free to rent out the
entire apartments if they choose to do that.
‘Alternatively, we may dissolve our master tenancy agreement with Ideal,
take back the apartments and rent them out ourselves.’
Addressing the issue of sub-divided units not having access to rubbish
chutes, OUE’s executive vice-president (investor relations) Clement Wang
said: ‘Units without rubbish chutes will be provided with bins outside the
units and these will be cleared once a day.’
BT understands that owners of apartments in other developments have also
done similar sub-divisions. But the difference is one of scale -
Grangeford now has 600 smaller units carved out of 140 apartments.
Two-bedroom units were split into either three or four smaller units while
the three-bedroom units were sub-divided into five to six units, Ideal
Accommodation managing director Tang Yong, a Chinese citizen and Singapore
PR, told BT.
The company provides rental housing accommodation, including student
housing and serviced apartments.
It currently has more than 400 units/apartments for lease in 60 locations
in Singapore. Its portfolio includes backpacker hotels in Geylang and the
Lavender area.
Existing tenants of sub-divided units at Grangeford include expats and
foreign students looking for lower-cost accommodation in District 9.
The $625 million collective sale of Grangeford to OUE was struck during
the market peak in 2007. With the property downturn, OUE decided against
redeveloping the project for the time being and opted to lease out the
existing 193 units instead. It managed to rent out 22 apartments before it
signed a master lease with Ideal Accommodation for 170 apartments.
Analysts say OUE will enjoy a significant saving in its property tax bill
on Grangeford by sealing a master lease with Ideal Accommodation. Once it
has leased at least 25 per cent of the apartments in Grangeford on
tenancies of at least a year, Grangeford’s annual value (AV) will be based
on the estimated total annual rent that can be fetched by all the
apartments in the development - which is a much smaller sum than if the AV
were to be based on 5 per cent of the estimated freehold market value of
the land. Property tax is calculated at 10 per cent of AV.
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