Posts tagged: Fusionopolis

Aug 17 2010

Fusionopolis’ Solaris 60% leased

SOLARIS, an extension of the Fusionopolis research cluster at Buona Vista, has been 60 per cent leased ahead of its completion by the end of the year.

The developer Soilbuild Group is in ‘advanced negotiations’ with other potential tenants.

Soilbuild’s executive director Low Soon Sim gave BT these updates following the release of the company’s second quarter results last week.

 Organisations which have signed leases at Solaris include government agency Spring Singapore, software designer Autodesk, video game creator and publisher Ubisoft, and green building consultancy Kaer.

Spring Singapore is Solaris’ largest tenant to date, taking up some 15 per cent of the total net lettable area of around 430,000 sq ft. Tenants should be moving in in the early part of next year, Mr Low said.

Soilbuild won the tender for Phase 2B of Fusionopolis in April 2008 and put in around $140 million to develop Solaris on the 83,248 sq ft site.

The building is designed by famed architect Ken Yeang and will be decked with roof gardens and other energy saving features.

Most of the space at the Solaris is set aside for offices. There will also be a childcare centre, and retail outlets will occupy some 3,000 sq ft of space. Soilbuild plans to start marketing the retail space this quarter.

JTC Corporation, which oversees the development of Fusionopolis as a research centre for the infocommunication, media, science and engineering industries, expects the completion of Solaris to boost human traffic flow in the area.

Fusionopolis Phase 1, which was officially opened in October 2008, currently has a working population of around 2,500 people. According to The Straits Times, business has been poor for retail outlets there. Just about 57 per cent of the retail space has been taken up.

JTC estimates that the daily average human traffic flow will increase to 4,000 when Solaris is completed. The working population could grow further as Fusionopolis expands through more phases.

Source: Business Times, 17 Aug 2010

Aug 13 2009

Prepared industrial land allocation falls in Q2

Negative 32.2 ha compares with net allocation of plus 14ha in Q1


(SINGAPORE) Net allocation of prepared industrial land went into negative territory in the second quarter for JTC Corporation, as the downturn continued to take a toll.
JTC’s Q2 facilities report shows net allocation was negative 32.2 hectares, compared with a net allocation of plus 14 ha in Q1 and 34 ha in Q2 2008.
Gross allocation in Q2 this year slid to 5.4 ha. And termination jumped to 37.6 ha, from 16.7 ha in Q1. Almost half of total terminations stemmed from the electronics segment. And almost a quarter of terminations was due to companies consolidating operations.

Net allocation of generic land and specialised parks also moved into negative territory in Q2.

Net allocation of generic land was negative 7.1 ha, down from plus four hectares in Q1 and significantly lower than 26.7 ha in Q2 2008. As gross allocation fell 77 per cent quarter-on-quarter to 2.5 ha, termination rose 37 per cent to 9.6 ha in Q2. The manufacturing sector accounted for 74 per cent of gross allocation.

Net allocation of specialised parks dropped to a negative 25 ha versus plus 10 ha in Q1 and 7.3 ha in Q2 2008. This was also due to lower gross allocation and higher termination. Gross allocation plunged 85 per cent quarter-on-quarter to 2.9 ha, while termination rose three-fold to 28 ha.

Wafer Fab Park accounted for 65 per cent of termination within specialised parks, with 18.3 ha in Q2, which widened net allocation for Wafer Fab Park from negative 6.5 ha in Q1 to negative 18.3 ha in Q2.

In JTC’s ready-built factory (RBF) segment, net allocation remained negative in Q2 but improved slightly, climbing to negative 7,800 sq m versus negative 8,900 sq m in Q1, thanks to a 64 per cent increase in gross allocation to 17,800 sq m. Higher gross allocation was partly offset by higher termination, which rose by 30 per cent to 25,600 sq m in Q2.

The RBF occupancy rate was 0.3 percentage points lower at 97.4 per cent.

Meanwhile, Phase 2A of Fusionopolis is under construction and is expected to be finished by 2013, JTC said yesterday.

Source: Business Times, 13 Aug 2009

Feb 24 2009

Fusing science, art and nature

Fusionopolis’ towers house scientists and engineers working on new medical solutions and technical innovations.

DRIVING past Buona Vista it is hard to miss the futuristic towers that make up the first phase of Fusionopolis. Connected by a podium, the 24-storey Symbiosis and 22-storey Connexis reflect the daylight off their glass facades like gems, while the red circular logo at the top of one-north glows like a beacon in the night.
But these buildings amount to much more than architectural beauty. Officially launched on Oct 17 last year, they have become home to a scientific community of talent working hard on the next technical innovation or medical solution.
As JTC Corporation’s assistant chief executive Philip Su explains, Fusionopolis aims to create an environment that is conducive to research, especially for the infocommunications, media, science and engineering industries to incubate and test-bed ideas and products. This, in turn, will create jobs and intellectual property (IP) rights for Singapore.
JTC is the master developer of one-north, the research and development (R&D) centre in the west that includes Fusionopolis, a project that has come a long way since construction began in 2003 amid the Sars outbreak.

Mr Su says JTC believes in the development’s long-term potential and went ahead with it even though market confidence was low at the time. The take-up rate since has been overwhelming. ‘Now I’ve got a problem,’ he says. ‘I don’t have enough space.’
Attractive co-location
Costing $560 million, Fusionopolis’s 120,000-square-metre phase 1 development already houses various public and private research institutes – co-location that is attractive because it promotes collaboration and the exchange of ideas.

Private tenants include Panasonic Electric Works Asia-Pacific, Seiko Instruments, Thales Technology Centre (S) and Vestas Technology R&D.
A*Star’s Science & Engineering Research Council (Serc), the Media Development Authority and Spring Singapore are also there.
And the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign will set up its first overseas research centre at Fusionopolis. It will run a five-year programme to study how humans can interact with the digital world as seamlessly as they do with their natural five senses – an example of new frontier research called the human sixth sense programme.
Indeed, Fusionopolis could well re-invent the way research is done, by bringing cross-disciplinary capabilities under one roof to find solutions to global challenges.
Such collaboration is already going on for treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) – a disorder that causes children to be disruptive and makes it hard for them to concentrate and learn.
A*Star’s Institute for Infocomm Research, the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School and the Institute of Mental Health are working on non-invasive therapy that helps people concentrate. They have come up with a game that could teach children with ADHD to focus, and perhaps to pay more attention to their teachers.
‘Creating this technology requires a multi-disciplinary team – it takes the expertise, experience and creativity of many individuals to identify the problem, develop a solution and the technologies to implement it,’ Science and Engineering Research Council chairman Charles Zukoski said last year. ‘It is solving problems in this manner that will epitomise the work conducted at Fusionopolis.’
To facilitate interaction, the first phase of Fusionopolis also integrates various live, play and learn elements for the 800 or so scientists, engineers and game developers working there.
Shopping and entertainment
Some reside comfortably in the 50 serviced apartments on the 17th to 19th floors of the Symbiosis tower after work. Managed by Frasers Hospitality, each unit is about 60 sq m.
There are also retail and food and beverage outlets such as Starbucks Coffee and Harry’s Bistro and Bar. In line with the Fusionopolis vision, Cold Storage is even test-bedding ideas at the Market Place

@ one-north. The supermarket is equipped with digital price tags and trolleys fitted with LCD screens that feature the latest promotions.

Staff looking to take a break from all the heavy research can retreat to one of the 13 sky gardens spread throughout the two towers. Some include ponds and water wells in the landscaping, and one may even screen out telecommunications signals in future for visitors to enjoy undisturbed peace.

Beyond beautifying the environment, the sky gardens also help diffuse heat from the buildings and create energy savings.
For those who prefer exercise as a way to unwind, there is Fitness First. The gymnasium has an open-air swimming pool and is situated on the top-most floors of the Connexis tower.

There is even a black-box theatre to bring the arts into the scientific community. Nestled between the two towers, the Genexis theatre has more than 500 retractable seats and the space can be easily configured to accommodate conferences, exhibitions and various other events.
With all these features, phase 1 of Fusionopolis can pride itself as the first high-density mixed-use development in one-north. Activity in the area is set to mount once phases 2A and 2B take shape.

The $600 million phase 2A development will be ready in 2012 and will house various laboratories, test-bedding centres and what could be Singapore’s largest R&D clean room facility across 103,600 sq m of space.
Phase 2B may be up and running in 2011 and will provide up to 50,000 sq m of space for other agencies and companies working with nearby institutes.

And more developments are set to come. The entire Fusionopolis will be a 30 ha complex comprising six phases when it is fully completed, by which time it will be Singapore’s icon for R&D in interactive media, physical sciences, engineering and technology.
Source: Business Times – 24 Feb 2009

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