Sense of kampung in condos overstated
WITH reference to Ms Susan Prior’s letter on Monday (’ Enbloc sales
eroding our ’sense of kampung’), I wish to point out that in a kampung,
you can walk up to a neighbour’s home and peer through the open door and
windows to strike up a conversation.
It is a place where children can run from one house to another and where
one can take temporary shelter when caught in a sudden downpour.
Can you duplicate this openness and fraternity in large, multi-storey
private housing estates like Gillman Heights and Bayshore Park where
closed doors, grilled gates and windows with drawn curtains are the norm?
Obviously not.
The kampung era is long gone. The world has moved on. An enbloc
development allows old estates to be redeveloped and not degenerate into
slums like in many other countries.
It is a better alternative than the compulsory acquisitions during those
kampung days, when compensations were a pittance.
Also, one should move out of this kampung mentality and learn to make new
friends while keeping the old.
This sense of kampung being eroded by enbloc sales is being overplayed by
a dissenting few. The fact that the majority are willing to sell says much
- that many are no longer enamoured of this kampung sentiment.
Lau Chee Kian
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