Tag: Tampines

  • Heng Swee Keat To Lead Task Force Probing Complaints By Residents Of DBSS Development Centrale 8

    Heng Swee Keat To Lead Task Force Probing Complaints By Residents Of DBSS Development Centrale 8

    Following a petition signed by owners of more than half of the units at Centrale 8, a taskforce surpervised by Tampines GRC Member of Parliament Heng Swee Keat will be formed to look into the residents’ grouses.

    Buyers of almost 400 of the 708 units in the Design, Build and Sell Scheme (DBSS) project had endorsed the petition to extend their year-long warranty. They also want compensation for alleged “inferior quality of materials” used and poor design that compromises their space, safety and privacy.

    Tampines Town Council chairman Baey Yam Keng told TODAY that Mr Heng had asked him to reply on his behalf, after residents emailed their petition last Friday (June 19) to the project’s developer, Sim Lian Group, and looped in the Housing and Development Board (HDB), Ministry of National Development and Tampines MPs.

    Mr Baey said the task force will be led by senior grassroots leaders, with Mr Heng supervising the team personally. The task force could include representatives from Sim Lian, HDB, the Building and Construction Authority and the town council.

    “We want to help residents by bringing the relevant people together so that we can all talk things over together,” he said.

    “Once we get the composition settled I think we should have the first meeting as soon as we can, because the residents are anxious.”

    Mr Baey added that the outcome “would have to be a balance between the wishes of the residents as well as the contractual obligations of the developers”.

    A developer has to rectify any defect in the units within a year after handing over the keys, but residents are worried other defects may surface after that. They are creating a document to highlight issues faced, and will be presenting it to the task force. They hope to have a dialogue by early July.

    In 2011, Centrale 8 made the headlines for the wrong reasons after its developer asked for S$880,000 for the five-room units – a record indicative asking price which was on par with the cost of suburban condominium units. This prompted a public outcry which led Sim Lian to slash the asking price to S$778,000. As the controversy brewed, National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan weighed in and said that consumers who thought the prices were too high should give the flats a miss. Soon after, the Government announced the DBS scheme was under review and subsequently, the sale of land for DBSS projects was suspended.

    According to earlier reports, Centrale 8 homeowners were upset about defects such as faulty locks, cracked tiles and burst water pipes.

    But they told TODAY they have bigger issues with the design of their homes and estate. For example, some toilet windows face the common corridor, which means windows cannot be opened. The entrance to the estate as well as the carpark meet at a cross junction, increasing chances of accidents, said residents, who are calling for another entrance and exit to be created.

    A resident who wanted to be known as Mr Cher said the main power switch for the aircon compressor is located outside the flat. “If I want to turn it off, I have to climb out onto the (aircon) ledge, which is very dangerous,” he said.

    Another resident, Ms Evelyn Soo, 46, found sanitary pipes taking up usable space in the service yard. When she told Sim Lian about it, the developer responded that the location of the pipes was “to meet with (PUB’s) requirement”.

    TODAY understands the national water agency sent a strongly-worded email to the developer calling such statements “wrong and misleading” as PUB “does not mandate that sanitary stacks be located at the service courtyard or AC (aircon) ledge of residential units”.

    Sim Lian clarified that the sanitary stack pipes located in the service yards of some unit types are there to meet PUB’s technical requirement, which states that the length of a discharge pipe connecting to the discharge stack pipe cannot exceed its maximum length of 2.5m.

    The developer also said it is common for architects to place sanitary stack pipes in wet areas including bathrooms, service yards or the aircon ledges of residential units.

    Another resident, who declined to be named, cited another “very awkward” design element where his main gate opens from the right, while the main door opens from left. Half of the master bedroom door protrudes into bedroom space when open. “We paid a premium price but we never got the premium value,” he said.

    A Sim Lian spokesman confirmed it has received the residents’ petition and “will continue to attend to their concerns on a one-to-one basis”.

    The developer said it remains committed to rectifying reported defects in accordance with the Sale and Purchase Agreement and will “also review subsequent requests for rectification works on a case-by-case basis” after the year-long Defects Liability Period expires.

    Sim Lian is working with HDB, Tampines Citizens’ Consultative Committee, Tampines Town Council, the People’s Association Residents’ Committee and grassroots representatives to facilitate the process.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Murder In Tampines – Suspect A PRC National

    Murder In Tampines – Suspect A PRC National

    A Chinese national stabbed himself on the ninth-floor ledge of an HDB block in Tampines and threatened to jump after allegedly killing a woman in the bedroom of a flat in the next block.

    Residents of Block 505, Tampines Central 1, where the Chinese man had run to after allegedly committing the crime at Block 503, said they heard a loud quarrel broke out at about midnight on Wednesday.

    Madam Lim Ai Lee, who lives on the eighth floor, said that she heard at least four different voices arguing loudly in heavily-accented Mandarin.

    “They were talking very quickly and it was just tense,” added the 41-year-old teacher, who could not make out what they were arguing about.

    She said that the noise continued till about 3am when she decided to yell at the people to keep quiet or she would call the police.

    Still, the commotion continued. She peeked out of her bedroom window and saw silhouettes and red, wet splotches dripping down the ledge on the landing.

    There, the police arrested a 37-year-old Chinese national, who was bleeding profusely, on Wednesday morning for the alleged murder of his housemate, who was also from China.

    Madam Lim said: “I thought it was red paint from construction work. There was so much. Who would have thought it was blood?”

    When The Straits Times visited Block 505 on Wednesday morning, blood covered the ledge on the ninth floor and had dripped to the first level. There was also blood on the staircase landing.

    The police said they received a call at 11.43pm on Tuesday, requesting for assistance. When the officers arrived at Block 503, they found a woman lying motionless in the unit on the seventh floor. Paramedics pronounced her dead at 12.10am.

    Police have classified the case as murder and are investigating.

    Next-door neighbour Fadzilah Hanum said she did not hear any commotion when the alleged murder happened.

    “It was my husband’s birthday, so I wished him ‘happy birthday’ at about 12.05am. He had just came home then,” said the 35-year-old customer service officer.

    She said that her previous neighbours had rented their unit out a couple of years ago, and since then, many Chinese nationals have been living in the five-room flat.

    “There are many mattresses in the living room,” she said. “They never open their doors fully, leaving only enough space for them to squeeze out one by one.”

    Residents said that about 10 people live in the five-room flat. It is not known how many of the occupants were in the flat when the alleged killing took place.

    But they did not think much of this, because their new neighbours kept to themselves and did not create any problems.

    Madam Fadzillah said: “Sometimes, they smile at my kids when I take them to school.”

    Another neighbour, Mr Neo Kim Tian, said that some of the tenants are believed to be factory workers as they wore uniforms on their way to work.

    “The unit has always been quiet,” added the 54-year-old maintenance worker.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 80 Year Old Grandpa Arrested for Murder, Oldest Murder Suspect in SG

    80 Year Old Grandpa Arrested for Murder, Oldest Murder Suspect in SG

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    SINGAPORE: An 80-year-old man was charged on Friday morning (Aug 22) with the murder of a woman, 54, whose bloodied body was found in a Tampines flat on Thursday.

    Char Chin Fah is alleged to have committed murder by causing the death of Madam Ong Guat Leng. The murder is alleged to have been committed between 9am and 10.04am at Block 440, Tampines Street 43.

    Char, who was dressed in a red polo tee-shirt, was seen glancing through the courtroom as the charge was being read out to him in Mandarin. It is unclear if any of his relatives were present in the courtroom at the time.

    Char will be remanded in the A Division of the Central Police Division for further investigations and brought to the crime scene.

    On Thursday morning, the bloodied body of Madam Ong, understood to be his daughter-in-law, was found in the bedroom of her third-floor corner unit.

    Char will return to court next Friday for the next mention of his case.

    If convicted of murder, he faces the death penalty.

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/80-year-old-man-charged/1324926.html

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