Posts tagged: MRT

Aug 31 2009

Bukit Panjang interchange may move near new MRT

BUKIT Panjang residents were given reason to hope yesterday that their existing bus interchange could be moved closer to an upcoming MRT station.

They were told that the authorities were considering the suggestion put up by three MPs, whose residents are affected by the planned siting of the Downtown Line MRT station expected to open in 2015.

They had pointed out that transfers would be inconvenient as the MRT station will be sited about 120m from the existing Bukit Panjang LRT and bus interchange.

The MPs’ proposal would reduce the distance between the LRT and the MRT station to 70m, said Bukit Panjang MP Teo Ho Pin at a dialogue with residents in his ward.

Residents can cut through the bus interchange to get to either station, making it very convenient for them, he added.

Currently, the plot of land between the LRT station and the upcoming MRT station is empty.
Dr Teo as well as Holland-Bukit Timah GRC MPs Vivian Balakrishnan and Liang Eng Hwa have had two meetings with the Land Transport Authority (LTA) to discuss the proposal.

Dr Balakrishnan is also the Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports.

The issue was first raised last year and yesterday, Transport Minister Raymond Lim, who was holding a dialogue after his visit to the ward, assured residents that the matter was under consideration.

Said Mr Lim: ‘We are working closely with the other agencies to see how best to integrate the three: the bus interchange, the LRT and the MRT.’

Previously, the LTA had explained that the MRT station could not be moved next to the LRT station owing to technical constraints.

The underground Downtown line is not able to swing sharply to meet the LRT station and return again to Woodlands Road in such a short distance.

Bukit Panjang residents like Ms Lim Ai Kheng, 43, are pleased that the authorities are looking into the suggestion.

‘I really hope it can be achieved,’ said the architectural assistant.

The Downtown Line station, with four exits, will also provide residents with a quick underground link to places like the Sri Murugan Hill Temple.

Devotees who worship at the temple, which is opposite the Bukit Panjang LRT station, will no longer need to take an overhead bridge to get to it.

They will be able reach the temple directly through an underpass from the MRT station.

Source, Straits Times, 31 Aug 2009

Aug 13 2009

No more ‘future MRT stations’ in condo ads

TWO developers which included unconfirmed locations of future MRT stations in their condo advertisements have stopped using the information as a selling point.

UOL Developments has altered publicity material for its Meadows@Peirce, removing a location map that showed several MRT stations on the planned Thomson Line, which will be ready only in 2018.

Far East Organization has removed the supposed site of a future station in Marine Parade from a webpage on the Silversea condo.

The moves came after The Straits Times ran an article over the weekend on developers using unconfirmed MRT information in their sales materials.

Ms Claire Cher, spokesman for UOL Group, parent of UOL Developments, said the company realised that station sites in its Meadows@Peirce advertisements ‘have not been confirmed’.

‘We have therefore taken steps on the very day the article appeared to remove the map from all our publicity materials.

‘It was never our intention to mislead buyers,’ she said.

Ms Cher also said the company is writing to buyers to inform them of the possibly inaccurate information, but stopped short of offering them outright the option to withdraw from their purchase.

One buyer, Mr Sean Chia, 37, said ‘it is good’ that UOL has corrected the ads. But he said he did not buy a unit there because of the proposed stations, which he pointed out were ‘not near’ the development.

‘We bought because of the location – it is close to a reservoir and there is a lot of greenery around. It is also a huge plot,’ he said.

Advertising Standards Authority of Singapore chairman Eleanor Wong said developers should avoid misleading advertisements.

‘Certainly, an advertiser should never make it seem like a ‘planned’ station has already been built; or oversell the certainty of the station being built if things are still open to confirmation.’

She added that builders should also ‘be careful not to give the impression that an MRT station is nearby if it is not’.

Far East Organization spokesman Oh Thay Lee gave the assurance that the company will now use only confirmed information on MRT lines and stations in its property advertisements.

She admitted that Far East ran an advertisement on July 11 on the Silversea that had a map which indicated the location of a possible MRT station in Marine Parade.

‘Since then, we have not used this map in our print advertisements,’ she said.

Subsequent Silversea ads, however, still had the line ‘near to the future Marine Parade MRT Station’. Far East said this too will be removed.

Source: Straits Times, 13 Aug 2009

Mar 03 2009

Downtown Line's Stage II work to start this month

WORK on the second stage of the Downtown MRT Line will start this month, with the first civil contract going to a Singapore-Korea joint venture.

Hock Lian Seng Infrastructure and Korea’s GS Engineering and Construction have clinched the deal to build the line’s depot near Woodlands for $410.7 million, the Land Transport Authority said yesterday.

The project includes constructing tunnels leading to and from the depot, which is sited on a 21ha plot that was once largely occupied by a Teochew cemetery.

Stage II of the Downtown Line is 16.6km long and has 12 stations. It spans from Gali Batu in Choa Chu Kang in the north to Rochor in the south, where it joins Stage I – a 4.3km loop to Marina.

Stops in Stage II include Bukit Timah’s Sixth Avenue, King Albert Park and Beauty World, as well as the Botanic Gardens and Newton. The line will be completed in 2015.

The final stage of the Downtown Line – a 19.1km project linking the eastern part of Singapore to the city – will be completed in 2016.

Singapore’s rail network expansion does not stop there.

Future projects include the Thomson Line, joining Woodlands to Marina Bay; and the Eastern Region Line, connecting Changi to Marina Bay via Marine Parade.

They are due to be completed in 2018 and 2020 respectively.

The depot for Downtown Line Stage II marks GS Engineering’s first infrastructural project in Singapore. The company is currently building the Seoul Subway Line and Goyang Train Depot in South Korea.

Hock Lian Seng Infrastructure is no stranger to MRT projects. It built the Circle Line’s Kim Chuan Depot – the world’s largest underground depot.

The entire 40km-long Downtown Line is expected to cost $12 billion. So far, about $3.2 billion worth of contracts have been awarded.

Source: Straits Times, 3 Mar 2009

Feb 28 2009

Boon for Boon Lay

Two new MRT stops to ease crowding at western station

THE twice-daily chaos that grips Boon Lay MRT station during the morning and evening peak hours on weekdays will soon quieten down.

The station, a popular pick-up and drop-off point, is where private buses wait bumper-to-bumper in public bus bays, taxi stands and along Boon Lay Way to pick up or drop off a crush of scurrying
commuters, mainly those working in Tuas and Jurong.

Relief has appeared in the form of two new MRT stations west of Boon Lay, which will also cut travelling time to other parts of the island by up to 15 minutes for the area’s residents.

Boon Lay, which used to be the western-most station on the East-West Line, will, from 5.30am today, have a track extending further out west to the pair of new MRT stops, Pioneer and Joo Koon, which will now bear some of the commuter load and spread out the crowds.

Their opening means that the buses chartered by factories to ferry their workers to and from Boon Lay can now stop elsewhere, perhaps at Joo Koon station.

The Land Transport Authority (LTA) has paved the way for this by building a sheltered bus bay along Benoi Road, about 200m from Joo Koon station.

The bus bay can take up to seven 40-seater buses and is linked to Joo Koon station by a covered walkway.

Already, private bus operators have indicated that they are willing to pick up or drop off commuters there instead of at Boon Lay.

Mr Chitson Yap of Chitson Transport, for instance, said at least one of his clients has already approached him to discuss the matter.

The factories and companies in the area are also positive about the change, partly because having their workers picked up or dropped off at Joo Koon will cost less.

Ms Melissa Lau, the human resource manager at plastics factory Superpet Plastic in Tuas, said that if transport companies could ‘give a better discount’, moving the pick-up/drop-off point to Joo Koon would be good.

She added: ‘Boon Lay is definitely messy in the mornings. Moving to Joo Koon will solve the problem.’

Pioneer and Joo Koon stations, declared open yesterday by Transport Minister Raymond Lim, are part of the 3.8km long Boon Lay Extension, which cost $436 million and took 31/2 years to build.

The extension is the first of $40 billion worth of new rail projects aimed at coaxing more people to use public transport.

The 35,000 people living or working west of Boon Lay station will be glad for the extension.

Instead of having to first make it to Boon Lay station by public or private bus, car, taxi, bicycle or on
foot for onward journeys elsewhere, they will now be linked to the rest of the rail network by the two new stations.

Mr Lim called the opening of Pioneer and Joo Koon stations a significant milestone, as they are the first new stops since the Government unveiled its ambitious plan last year to revamp the public transport system.

The extension of the East-West Line will ‘help to improve the attractiveness of public transport as a choice mode of travel’, he said at the extension’s opening ceremony at Pioneer station.

Pioneer sits along Jurong West Street 63, while Joo Koon, the East-West Line’s new terminal station, is at Joo Koon Circle, near the Tuas industrial area, the Singapore Discovery Centre and the Safti Military Institute.

At the official opening of the extension yesterday, Mr Lim led hundreds of LTA officials and guests in a countdown.

At the count of zero, a train pulled into the station, honking its horn loudly.

The new disabled-friendly stations each have four lifts and four escalators.

Commuters who use them can also expect to do a spot of shopping along the overhead bridges leading to them.

Source: Straits Times – 28 Feb 2009

Feb 26 2009

Residents looking forward to Circle Line

Those living near five stations opening on May 30 now travel mostly by bus & face long wait

THE nearest MRT station for housewife Malika Khatri’s Serangoon Avenue 3 home is just three bus stops away.

The trouble is, only one bus service plies the route to Serangoon MRT station.

‘I go out during non-peak hours, and the bus can take up to 25 minutes to arrive while you sit baking in the sun,’ said Ms Khatri, 29.

When Circle Line Stage 3 begins operations on May 30, she can kiss her long bus wait goodbye.

One of the line’s five stations to open – Lorong Chuan – is just a five-minute walk away from her home.

Other stations that will open are Marymount, Bishan, Serangoon and Bartley. Bishan and Serangoon are existing stations but they currently serve only the North-South and North-East lines respectively.

Like Ms Khatri, residents in Lorong Chuan, Marymount and Bartley do not have an MRT station close to their homes. They have to take a bus to either Bishan station or Serangoon station, and largely rely on buses to get around.

But there are not many bus services to choose from. Fewer than 10 serve the areas where the Circle Line’s new stations are situated. Waiting times can also be unpredictable, said the area’s Member of Parliament Seah Kian Peng (Marine Parade GRC).

‘While the physical distance is short, the waiting time can be quite long,’ said Mr Seah. Some bus services can take up to 20 to 25 minutes to arrive.

For the residents of Marymount, the new station will be a boon. It will help them bypass the traffic jams of Thomson Road during peak hours, said the area’s MP, Mr Hri Kumar Nair (Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC).

Madam Doris Chan, 62, who lives near Marymount station, is considering giving up driving to work when the station opens. ‘The jam along Thomson Road is such a nuisance to deal with,’ said the businesswoman, who works near Lavender MRT station.

Madam Chan and those who live around the five new stations will not be the only ones to benefit. Bishan and Serangoon residents will also be able to use the Circle Line to switch between it and the North-South and North-East lines when the stations become interchanges.

One expectant commuter is Mr Varatharaja Nadarajan, 50, who needs to make two bus trips from his home in Serangoon to his workplace in Yishun. During the evening peak hour, the journey home can take up to an hour.

When Circle Line Stage 3 opens, he can get from Serangoon to Yishun in 25 minutes.

‘It will help me save a lot of time,’ said Mr Nadarajan, an army regular.

Like many commuters, local businesses are also waiting with bated breath for the new stations to open. Some are hoping that the new stations will bring in a bigger crowd.

‘We might have new customers who haven’t been here before,’ said Madam Suzanna Toh, 40, a hawker at Shunfu market, near Marymount station.

Source: Straits Times, 26 Feb 2009

Feb 13 2009

Four MRT lines in Marina Bay by 2018

BY 2018, the Marina Bay area will be served by four MRT lines – the North-South Line, Circle Line, Downtown Line and the Thomson Line.

Commuters will be able to reach an MRT station within a walking distance of no more than 400m on average.

Transport Minister Raymond Lim revealed this in response to MP and deputy chair of Government Parliamentary Committee for Transport Ong Kian Min’s question on what was being done to make transport seamless in the Marina Bay area which will house the integrated resort.

Mr Lim said that the ministry was also working on making access to MRT stations in the new downtown seamless, with walkways underground, at street level and above ground.

Some could also be malls, like the link between Suntec City and City Hall MRT station.

Source: Straits Times – 13 Feb 2009

Feb 13 2009

Five stations on Circle Line to open in May

Transport improvements with new lines and more trains to save travel time
RESIDENTS in areas such as Lorong Chuan and Bartley Road will have an MRT station at their doorsteps a tad earlier than expected.

Circle Line Stage 3, which has five stations, will open on May 30 instead of June, Transport Minister Raymond Lim announced in Parliament during yesterday’s debate on his ministry’s budget.
The remaining 24 stations on the new line will open progressively from next year, helping to reduce crowding on the existing MRT lines.

When completed, the Circle Line will take about 10 to 15 per cent of commuter trips from existing lines.
‘(It) will help commuters save travel time, by reducing the need to make detours into the city centre to transfer across MRT lines,’ said Mr Lim.

The five stations that will open are Marymount, Bishan, Lorong Chuan, Serangoon and Bartley.
Bishan will be the interchange station for the North-South line and Serangoon, the North-East line.
Student Jerald Seow, 15, who lives near Bartley Road, was among those who jumped with joy yesterday on hearing the earlier opening date.
He now takes a 25-minute bus ride to Paya Lebar MRT station and hops on a train to get to town on weekends.

‘When Bartley station opens, I can take a train to Bishan MRT instead. It will be a lot more convenient,’ he said.
The Circle Line is among $40 billion worth of rail projects that will double Singapore’s rail network.

Besides adding new rail lines, the Transport Ministry is also intent on reducing waiting time along existing lines, which introduced 900 extra train trips a week last year.

One major move is the purchase of 22 new trains, to be delivered in 2011.
Another is to expand Jurong East MRT station, where there is a bottleneck.

Trains arriving there from Bukit Batok now have only one platform and track to stop at before they turn around. A second train will have to wait for the first to leave before it pulls into Jurong East.
A project to add another platform and track will be completed by 2011 instead of 2012, said Mr Lim.

The changes to Jurong East station and the new trains will cost $800 million in all. They will help boost carrying capacity along the North-South and East-West lines by 15 per cent and slash the waiting time between trains to two minutes in 2011 from the current 2.1 to 4 minutes.
It is not possible to go lower than two minutes, the ministry said, as the signalling system on the North-South and East-West lines cannot support a shorter time between trains.

Yet another project that will come onstream earlier is the extension of the North-South MRT line to Marina South. It will be completed a year earlier, in 2014.
Meanwhile, trains are likely to be more crowded as public transport ridership grows, before relief arrives in 2011.

Overcrowding on trains was raised by Madam Cynthia Phua (Aljunied GRC).
Responding, Mr Lim said the crowding level is still below what is acceptable.

At their most crowded, trains here carry an average of 1,300 to 1,450 passengers, compared to the Land Transport Authority’s standard of 1,600 passengers.
They are also less crowded than trains in other cities. Singapore’s trains pack in four people per square metre, which is similar to those in Hong Kong but lower than London’s (five people) , Tokyo’s (seven) and Shanghai’s (eight).

Parliament sitting continues today, the last day of the nine-day Budget debate.
Source: Straits Times – 13 Feb 2009
Feb 07 2009

Western suburb gets a rail boost

Retail-transport hub for Boon Lay, two new MRT stations after that
TRANSPORT-WISE, things are looking up for residents in the western suburb of Boon Lay.
By the end of this month, the Boon Lay MRT station will no longer be the last one on the East-West line when two new stations farther west, Pioneer and Joo Koon, open.

And by the third quarter of the year, a retail and transport hub will open next to the Boon Lay station. The complex will house the bus interchange, along with shops – all cocooned in air-conditioned comfort.
The two new MRT stations in the west beyond Boon Lay will serve close to 35,000 people living in Jurong West or working in the Jurong Industrial Estate.
Without these two stations, residents and workers have been alighting at the Boon Lay station and then cycling, walking or taking one of the 10 feeder buses from the Boon Lay bus interchange to their final destinations.
The new stations will save them that second leg of their trip home or to work, shaving up to 15 minutes of travelling time.
Residents in the area have long complained about how long it takes them to go downtown, because they need to get to the Boon Lay station first.
Madam Maureen Ng, 50, who lives in Jurong West Street 61, takes almost an hour to get to the city to do her shopping.
With Pioneer station right next to her block, she now has a direct route downtown. This saves her the 10- to 15-minute hike to Boon Lay station.
Mr Cedric Foo, an MP for West Coast GRC, said the new stations will also reduce congestion at Boon Lay station, where those heading to Tuas usually alight to make transfers. These commuters can now choose to get off at Joo Koon station.
He noted that buses ferrying workers from Tuas to Boon Lay interchange have been stopping indiscriminately along the road, causing peak-hour traffic jams.
‘I hope this will be a thing of the past,’ he said.
At the upcoming integrated Boon Lay Hub, which will be like those in Toa Payoh, Ang Mo Kio and Sengkang, the new bus interchange will be part of the Jurong Point 2 shopping mall.
Its concourse will lead directly to the shops.
Madam Jamiah Maarof, 50, is glad that the currently ‘hot and dirty’ bus interchange will be gone.
‘With air-con, it will be easier to wait for the bus,’ said the housewife, who has lived in Boon Lay for 20 years.
Blueprints for integrated hubs have also been drawn up for Clementi, Bedok, Jurong East, Serangoon, Joo Koon and Marina South.
Source: Straits Times – 7 Feb 2009
Feb 10 2008

The MRT guide to home prices

Buyers increasingly keen on units near stations, which can command up to a 20% premium
HOME seeker Wan Kum Wai is hunting for a flat that is well-located – specifically, within walking distance of an MRT station.
For this convenience, the multimedia designer and his wife Jessie are willing to pay 10 to 20 per cent more than they would for a home a few bus stops away from a station.

‘We don’t drive, and the cost of living is running high,’ he said. ‘We don’t mind paying more because we think this will help us save on transportation costs and other expenses in the long run.’
In an era of sky-high petrol prices, multiplying Electronic Road Pricing gantries and increasing worries over environmental degradation, the all-important ‘location, location, location’ element of a home purchase has taken on a new slant.
While the classic prime districts of 9, 10, 11 are still sought after, home buyers are also increasingly keen on properties near MRT stations.
Apart from non-drivers, MRT-accessible homes also attract buyers with school-going children as well as investors who want to rent the units to expatriates, many of whom rely heavily on public transport, say property agents.
Ms Mylene Kwan, a PropNex agent who is helping Mr Wan find a home, said some of her clients have only one priority: to be near an MRT station.
‘Many of them don’t drive, so it’s very important to these buyers,’ she said.
But such proximity comes at a price.
Ms Kwan estimated that HDB flats with this privilege have their valuations alone jacked up by at least $20,000 or $30,000, and buyers often pay even more in cash on top of that.
The most popular HDB flats near MRT stations are those close to town, such as in the Tiong Bahru, Redhill and Queenstown areas, she said.
But even in the suburbs, a nearby station can give a big boost to prices.
In Woodlands, owners of flats near the MRT station are asking $40,000 to $50,000 above valuation just because of the location, said Ms Rohaizah Ramjan, another PropNex agent.
Whenever these flats come on the market, they get snapped up within two or three weeks, she added. For ‘normal ones’ further from the station, it can take a few months for a sale to be closed.

‘Flats near MRT stations are harder to come by, because owners are comfortable there and don’t want to sell,’ she said. ‘So if a buyer has the budget and they see a well-located flat for sale, they just grab.’
The same principle applies to private property. Condominiums near MRT stations can command a premium of up to 20 per cent over similar units a bit further away, said Mr Eric Cheng, executive director of HSR Property Group.
The price difference stems partly from the convenience of these homes, but is also due to their limited supply, he added.

‘If you look at the whole map of Singapore, I dare say only about half the MRT stations have condos right next door. Of course, they command a premium, a good 10 to 20 per cent above neighbouring properties 10 minutes’ walk away.’
At Tiong Bahru MRT station, for instance, new condos that are at the doorstep of the station – such as Twin Regency and Regency Heights in Kim Tian Road – fetch $1,240 per sq ft (psf) on average.
About five to 10 minutes away, prices average $1,072 psf, or about 15 per cent less, at the equally new The Regency at Tiong Bahru on Chay Yan Street.
‘Most of these units are rarely on the market,’ said Mr Cheng. ‘Even if the owners are not staying in them, they might not want to sell because they can get very high rental returns.’
Still, not all MRT stations are equal. Property values can differ widely between two consecutive stops, such as in the case of Novena and Toa Payoh, where condos around the former are almost double the price of those around the latter, according to an extensive analysis done by property firm Savills Singapore.

Even stations within a few kilometres of each other can see significantly different prices.
Savills’ data showed that condos around the Dhoby Ghaut station, for instance, fetched an average of around $1,600 psf in the first six months of the year. Less than 2km away, condos near the Little India station cost only two-thirds that on average, or $1,071 psf.
‘Apart from the proximity to an MRT station, buyers do look at other factors,’ said Mr Ku Swee Yong, Savills’ director of marketing and business development.
“Equally important is the quality, age and tenure of the project and its facilities, how much the unit can fetch in rentals and what amenities are nearby.”
Mr Ku cited Lavender and Farrer Park MRT stations, separated by just 1.5km in distance but about $200 psf in price
At Lavender, well-equipped condos such as Citylights boosted prices in the vicinity to an average of $1,104 psf in the first six months of the year. But Farrer Park is surrounded by several smaller condos with minimal facilities, so rents and prices tend to be lower, said Mr Ku.

Source: Straits Times – 2 Oct 2008

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