Social Housing Singapore Style

April 22nd, 2009

Singapore is a small country of only 700 km². Although it has grown from 581.5 km² in the 1960s, land reclaimation can not keep up with the population growth and the need for land.

With a population of 3.6 million people, the price of land is very high with only the upper middle class able to afford to live in landed or high rise private property. That equates to around 20% of the population. The rest of the 80% of Singaporeans live in HDB flats. HDB stands for Housing Development Board and is a government statutary board.

During the 1960s, there were still many ad hoc settlements with poor drainage and sanitary infrastructure. The government was on a drive to build proper housing facilities and aimed to provide every family with their own home.

Today, Singapore is considered a developed nation and with that, priorities for housing has changed. There are now more types of social housing available to cater to the various income groups. Flats come in basic and premium where the difference is usually full height windows in the living and finishes like timber flooring in the bedrooms.

For people who would like to upgrade to better housing but can not afford the price of private apartments, schemes such as Executive Condominiums and now DBSS flats have been introduced.

Executive Condominiums are similar to private condominiums with facilities such as swimming pools and gymnasium except it is built by the HDB. More recently, DBSS which stands for Design, Build and Sell Scheme was introduced. Developers are given the freedom to complete and launch the project creating better housing at subsidised rates.

New Pets & Pests

April 11th, 2009

It’s been a few months since the last post as we finally got our new place and have been busy going through the transaction process.

Upon getting the keys, the sellers had five fresh water lobsters still swimming in the pond. Their new home was still under construction and they had no space to keep them in their rental apartment.

The next day, we were going through the house discussing ideas for the interior fitout and found cockroaches in the kitchen cabinets. Hmm, that we did not want to keep.

While studying in Australia, we always bought insecticide to fumigate the whole house before moving in. It comes in a canister and when set off releases a cloud of insecticide. All the doors and windows would be shut and we would go catch a movie. After a few hours, all the bugs would be dead and it was time to vacuum the whole place.

We popped over to the supermarket but could not find a similar product. In the end, we bought a normal spray type canister insecticide. The product was water based so we hope it would be easier to clean the cabinets and timber floor after the killing spree.

Christmas 2008

December 28th, 2008

During the festive season last year, we designed and made a little LED light box to give out to friends. Goes well with  the Christmas tree and makes a great night light.

This year we decided to bake some cookies. After all, what is Christmas without cookies? Trying out various recipes was not the only fun part. We went window shopping for the materials to package the cookies.

Trying to keep the budget affordable, we headed to Daiso the $2 shop. There was just such a huge range of paper and plastic bags, boxes and wrapping material to choose from.

I found a nice transparent bag with a recipe text printed in a dark chocolate brown colour. Unfortunately, it was the last pack on the rack. We bought another 2 packs of bags in other designs.

We already had a plastic bag sealer and when we gave the cookies out to friends, many people were unsure if they were bought off the shelf or hand made. I guess the ultimate compliment was when a colleague asked where to bought the cookies as they tasted really good.

 

 

Yan Kit Swimming Complex

November 2nd, 2008

Located in the heart of Tanjong Pager lies this forgotten piece of architecture. It is sandwiched on a little hill behind Tanjong Pagar Complex and Duxton Plain. Invisible from the main road, this old swimming pool was closed many years ago and forgotton.

I first noticed an old single storey art deco styled building from my office at Amara Hotel. It intrigued me as in a fast paced and land scarce Singapore, there was still an abandoned structure sitting on valuable land located in the Central Business District.

Yan Kit Swimming Pool was the first public pool in Singapore. It was named after a Cantonese Dentist, Look Yan Kit who was trained in Hong Kong and subsequently came to Singapore in 1877.

It was built in 1952 and officially opened in December 1952 by Sir John Nichols the Governor of Singapore at that time. The pool was altered into an Olympic sized pool in the 1990s. In 2001, the pool was closed due to leaks that developed. It was too costly to repair and maintain. Another factor it was closed was due to losing many visitors to the newer public pools with bigger and better facilities.

The future of the Yan Kit Swimming Complex is uncertain. The Singapore Sports Council now manages it and have requested for proposals from interested parties to redevelope it in September 2003 and again in May 2005. With nothing arising from that, it looks like the Yan Kit Swimming Complex will disappear from our built environment very soon.

Macintosh SE/30

October 23rd, 2008

The Macintosh SE/30 is the most powerfull compact mac. It can take a maximum of 128mb of ram. Sounds really little by today’s standards but compared to the rest of the compact macs it is a huge amount.

Take for example the Macintosh Colour Classic which is the only compact mac with a colour screen. It takes up to 12mb of ram but can only address 10mb.

I managed to pick up one of these machines. It’s not in the best of condition and there are no cables or keyboard with it. I can’t wait to try and test if it’s working tonight.

iPhone 3G After 1 Month

October 21st, 2008

Having been holding out for the iPhone to officially launch in Singapore, I was really ecstatic to know that it was going to be brought in by Singtel. I pre-registered to purchase it on the launch day but when I arrived the queue was snaking around the building.

It was only a week later that I picked up my black 16G iPhone. I decided to choose the black as there were reports of the case cracking easily and it shows up on the white coloured iPhones readily. Not sure if it is a design flaw or how rampent it is.

After a month has passed, there are still a few quirks that I still have not gotten used to.

  • No way to forward sms
  • Cannot check last call duration
  • New contacts added from the phone cannot be added to groups
  • Difficult to type sms or make a call without looking at the screen

There are also things I like and use a lot on the iPhone.

  • Dedicated switch to turn off the ringer
  • Sms in conversation style
  • Web browsing with Safari

What’s your take on the iPhone?

 

View Websites Blocked By Firewall Through Free Web Proxy

October 16th, 2008

Recently, the adsl modem at home stopped working. A friend donated a used modem but I could not get it to work. The contract for the broadband connection was almost up hence I could recontract and get a free modem. Now how am I going to update my blog and other websites?

I tried to use the internet at the office but was blocked by the firewall. In case the boss is reading, I did it during lunch hour. Seriously, there’s no free time in the office. Everyone is swamped with work.

Okay, so I remembered reading about using a web based proxy to access the internet where countries filtered the internet. I know what you’re thinking but Singapore is not one of the countries. A google search revealed many free proxy sites. I tried a few but some could not access the sites properly, many plastered my screen with advertisements or just loaded really slowly.

I decided to dig a little deeper and found that I could setup my own using a spare domain name I had registered recently. So if you’re ever at uni or work, feel free to use my free web proxy at the url below.

www.moobin.net

Fresh Architecture Graduate

September 23rd, 2008

In Singapore, it is against the low to call oneself an architect if they are not registered with the Board of Architects. There are no clear guidelines to what a fresh graduate should call themselves on the internet.

After an enquiry with BOA, the four recommended titles are as follows:

Architectural Assistant
Architectural Graduate
Architectural Associate
Architectural Coordinator

The four recommended titles sound like a property agent, project manager or draftsperson. I can understand the value of the name architect as a profession being diluted with other industries borrowing it. Just do a search for architect in an online job agency and you’ll find a whole list of jobs in other sectors.

If a computer programmer can call themselves a Systems Architect and a ship builder a Naval Architect, could someone with a degree in architecture call themselves a Graduate Architect? Architectural makes it sound quite distant from Architect. It’s more like someone who is more closely involved in the supply or construction of buildings. I guess that’s an additional motivation to register with the board.

Taxi

August 13th, 2008

A long time ago, there were only a few types of cars used as a taxi in Singapore. It was either a Nissan Cedric or Toyota Crown.

Today, there is a myriad of new taxi companies and with it a dazzling range of vehicles. Honda Airwaves, Toyota Estimas, Toyota Wish, Skoda Octavia to even 4WD Mitsubishi double cab pickups. Mercedes E200 are now commonly used too. No wonder all new privately owned Mercedes on the road are never white.

When I was searching for a used car with the lowest depreciation, the Nissan Sunny came up one of the lowest. Of course there were cheaper cars but this was made in Japan and it was a proper mid sized sedan. To me it did not look great as compared to nicer styling like the Honda Civic or Mazda 6. But hey, it gets me from point A to B. At least no one will mistaken my car for a taxi unlike the many Airwaves and Wish on the road. 

 

Current Computer Setup

June 27th, 2008

13 inch Black MacBook Rev.A 2.0 Core Duo (Upgraded maximum 2gb ram and 250gb hard drive)

15 inch PowerBook G4 1.5 ghz (Upgraded 1.5gb ram)

15 inch PowerBook G4 1.33 ghz (Upgraded 768mb ram and 120gb hard drive)

17 inch iMac G4 1.25 ghz (Factory upgraded 512mb ram, everything else stock)

Mac Mini 1.5 ghz Core Solo (Recently sold away…. why did i sell it?)

Cube G4 450 mhz (Upgraded maximum 1.5gb ram and maximum 120gb hard drive)

20th Anniversary Macintosh (Upgraded maximum 128mb ram)

12 inch iBook G3 366mhz non firewire (Upgraded maximum 576mb ram, 30gb hard drive, airport card and OS X 10.4.11 Tiger)

Snow Dual Ethernet Airport base station

The three laptops are used as the main machines while the Cube acts as a file server through external firewire hard drive.

The 20th Anniversary Macintosh or TAM for short with it’s integrated BOSE sound system is used for streaming music. Hey, you gotta have some music while working.

The iBook is used as an impromptu wireless base station. Extended lease of life for an 8 year old laptop. As the Airport Base station is also a wireless B, it’s time for me to upgrade to a new wifi setup soon. Perhaps a cheap 2nd hand wireless G network card will make it’s way into the iMac G4 to speed up the network. If budget permits than maybe a Time Capsule. However, since I still have quite a few older Macs I will not be able to take full advantage of the wireless N.