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Construction costs for 5-room, 4-room, 3-room & 2-room units respectively averaged about $160,000, $120,000, $80,000 & $40,000 (based on 2004 cost). This also include the cost of sub-contractors and construction of multistorey car parks , lifts , electrical substations (ESS), child-care centres, playgrounds, fitness corners, linkway shelters ...
Additional Housing Grant (abbrev: AHG) was an additional subsidy over and above the regular market subsidy and Central Provident Fund Housing Grant that new and resale Housing and Development Board flat buyers in Singapore can enjoy.
Block 45 in 2021 Blocks 48 and 49 in 2021. 45, 48 and 49 Stirling Road are three residential flats on Stirling Road in Queenstown, Singapore.They were the first three blocks completed by the Housing and Development Board (HDB), having been previously left unfinished by its predecessor, the Singapore Improvement Trust.
3-storey walk-up apartments (Blocks 16, 24, 26 and 32) 3-storey walk-up apartment (Block 24, Dakota Crescent) 2-storey commercial blocks/shop house (Block 12) 2-storey commercial block (Block 12, Dakota Crescent) The first storey was commercialized and used as shop houses e.g. Tian Kee & Co. Provision Shop, while the second storey was residential.
In 1978, the restriction on new flat purchase was replaced by a resale levy. [37] Resale restrictions were loosened in the late 1980s; income limits were removed, and permanent residents and property owners were allowed to purchase resale flats in 1989. In 1991, the resale market was opened to unmarried people older than 35.
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A window which was octagonal and read "Meyer Flats" was placed above the roof. [1] A window, described by Davison as a "quasi-Venetian affair", could be found at the upper stairwell. [1] Each of the 12 units in the building featured two bedrooms with attached bathrooms, a living area, a "small" dressing room, two servants' rooms and a kitchen. [2]
After the fire, the HDB focused its efforts on Bukit Ho Swee's redevelopment, rapidly designing and constructing a public housing estate on the fire's site, with people displaced by urban renewal projects and kampong fires rehoused in the estate's flats. Their occupants disliked the one-room emergency flats, so by the mid-1960s, the HDB had ...