Better connectivity and more housing choices are on the cards
MORE residential areas in Jurong are to be rejuvenated as part of the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s (URA) 2008 Master Plan to develop commercial hubs outside the Central Business District.
Supporting the growth of the Jurong Lake District, Faber Terrace, Faber Hills, Teban Gardens and Pandan Gardens will soon enjoy better connectivity and more housing choices.
Various infrastructure plans in the region will proceed ‘notwithstanding the current economic downturn’, said URA in a release yesterday.
The government will be enhancing roads at Faber Terrace and Faber Hills. Not only will this improve the area’s traffic situation, it will also allow more low and medium-density housing fronting Sungei Ulu Pandan to be built in future, said URA.
Noting that traffic along the Ayer Rajah Expressway in the area can be heavy, DTZ’s executive director Ong Choon Fah agreed with the plans. ‘If you build up the Jurong Lake District, you will also need to find an accessible way to get there,’ she said.
According to URA, new residences at Faber Terrace and Faber Hills will be private and could include landed property as well as low- and medium-density condominiums. The area could be suitable for cluster housing, said Cushman & Wakefield Singapore managing director Donald Han.
Teban and Pandan Gardens will also undergo rejuvenation. Two public housing sites at Teban Gardens are already under the selective en-bloc redevelopment scheme, and PUB’s ABC Waters programme for the Pandan Reservoir will further enhance waterfront living in the area.
There are also plans to improve Teban and Pandan Gardens’ connectivity with the Jurong Lake District.
The district - comprising a commercial centre at Jurong Gateway and a leisure hotspot at Lakeside - could attract more large and global companies and the redevelopment of the International Business Park would further support this. As JTC Corporation also said yesterday, it plans to add another five hectares of land and raise plot ratios for some areas in the park.
Knight Frank director of research and consultancy Nicholas Mak pointed out that multinational corporations do pay attention to where the workforce is when they pick a site for their headquarters or factories. ‘To know that (workers) are all living around is good, there is a ready pool of labour,’ he said.
The announcements are also ‘a signal to potential developers and investors that there is still land around the Jurong Lake area available,’ he added.
URA also provided more updates on the development of Jurong Lake District yesterday.
For instance, dredging works to deepen the Jurong Lake for more water-based activities are already underway.
Source : Business Times - 30 Dec 2008
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