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The living and dining room of the 6,814-square-foot duplex penthouse designed through Peter Tay Studio, which is now on the market for $20. 8 million (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
SINGAPORE (EDGEPROP) – In December 2019, before Covid entered our vernacular, Singapore-listed real estate conglomerate Singapore Land Group (then known as United Industrial Corp), sold two V-penthouses in Shenton to a single buyer, a Hong Kong group, to name deeds: a 4-bedroom, 3,315-square-foot simplex on the 52nd floor and a 5,533-square-foot 4-bedroom duplex directly above on the 53rd floor. This raised the number of penthouses sold to 4 out of six in the 510-unit, 99-year-old high-end leased Condominium completed in October 2017. The assignment is located at the center of the CBD in First District 1.
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These penthouses were sold as part of the developer’s “Attic Selection Series,” which is “a collaboration with renowned designers,” says Jason Lim, director of residential marketing at Singapore Land (SingLand).
With only two duplex penthouses remaining, SingLand decided to sell them as bare or fully furnished sets. When the Covid pandemic hit, the developer saw that there was a need for equipped and furnished sets for early occupancy, Lim explains.
The two duplex penthouses have 5. 2m upper ceilings, 4 en-suite bedrooms, living room, dining room and kitchen on the lower level, while the entertainment room and private roof terrace are on the upper level. However, the designs and sizes of the penthouses are different, and the prospects also vary, as they are on other pillars of the 54-story condominium tower.
The living and dining room of the $6,200-square-foot, $18. 8 million duplex penthouse designed by SuMisura’s Angela Lim (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
This led SingLand to appoint two prominent in-house designers with radically different design philosophies to put their mark on the remaining penthouses: Angela Lim, director of SuMisura, and Peter Tay of Peter Tay Studio.
Everyone’s design technique is very different: that’s what the developer wanted, says SingLand’s Lim. “The target audience for the penthouse is also very different,” he adds.
The smallest penthouse is the 6200-foot duplex on the 52nd floor. The penthouse is north facing and offers panoramic perspectives of the rooftops of the CBD, the floating platform of Marina Bay and the rooftops of Johor Bahru in the distance. It is designed through SuMisura.
When Lim de SuMisura visited the unit naked for the first time, he saw an opportunity. “Very rarely do you find an attic with that upper roof,” he says. “The white walls, the white ceiling gave us a white canvas to paint. with. There were so many things we could do.
Lim by SuMisura: We seek to create an appearance consistent with the rose gold and bronze main points of our traditional furniture and accessories, from wall sconces to chandeliers and room dividers (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
She felt it was vital to overlay the cavernous area to give it a sense of order. With the softness of herbs flooding the attic during the day, the interiors tend to be very bright. She saw this as an opportunity to create a darker, more comfortable interior environment.
Dark panels were placed on the front corridor and a metal separator with a rose gold end was installed to complete this. The separator was designed with fins and openings so that the view from there is not compromised.
To satisfy the garage desires of long-standing owners, in the lobby there is a wall console with gaps and lighting fixtures for display, which also serves as a ventilated shoe closet at the bottom. An additional garage area has been created under the staircase, camouflaged wall cladding.
The living and dining room, as well as the adjacent attic balcony, have been delimited through SuMisura as an entertainment space. Three of the en-suite bedrooms, plus the master bedroom and the hallway leading to it, can be closed through a back door.
One of the 4 bedroom penthouse designed through SuMisura as a hidden house (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
Next to the dining room is the fourth bedroom, which Lim de SuMisura turned into a “hidden house office”, with its door also through the dark carpentry of the dining room.
The furniture and accessories have been custom designed through SuMisura exclusively for the attic. This includes the eight-seater king blue velvet sofa in the living room, the ebony wood dining table and rose gold edges, with matching dining chairs covered in velvet and leather, with ornaments and back handles in rose gold.
“We seek to create an appearance consistent with the rose gold and bronze main points of our bespoke furniture and accessories, from wall sconces to chandeliers and room dividers,” says Lim de SuMisura.
The entertainment area at the top point functions as a circular family room and is also an ideal area to entertain friends and enjoy the view. It opens onto a private rooftop terrace of approximately two hundred m² (2,153 sq ft), ideal for ample entertainment. domain. SuMisura has arranged the domain with a dining set next to the kitchen and a pool table. “You can enjoy the view from the comfort of your own home,” she says.
SuMisura-designed entertainment room at the tip of the 6200-square-foot duplex penthouse (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
Dry and rain cookers have been stocked through high-end kitchen appliance developer Gaggenau, forged surface kitchen countertops and quality cabinets.
To break the monotony of a long corridor leading to the rooms, SuMisura installed mirrors in normal periods for the flashes of the interior of the rooms.
Of the 3 bedrooms, the master bedroom has been transformed to the maximum. To create a more spacious master bedroom, the walk-in closet was removed. New closets were built along the walls of the master bedroom. aside, but we more than made up for it by expanding the amount of cloakroom area,” she says.
The 6,200-square-foot penthouse is priced at $18. 8 million ($3,032 consistent with square foot), which includes interior design and furniture for $1 million through SuMisura.
The master bedroom designed through SuMisura with garage moved to the sides of the wall (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
“We envisioned that the client would be a Suite C expat or a key member of the circle of relatives workplace who intends to move to Singapore with their circle of relatives,” says SingLand’s Lim.
The other penthouse on the 53rd floor is larger at 6,814 square feet. With a view of Sentosa Cove, the Tanjong Pagar container terminal and the long haul Greater Southern Water, Peter Tay envisioned the penthouse as a scene. the lighting and the stage,” he says.
To take advantage of the exterior view, Tay darkened the dark wood interior panels of the ceiling. He ended it by creating a stucco roof, encouraged through the dome and skylight of the Pantheon in Rome. be very cute because inside it’s dark and you can see Sentosa illuminated,” he says.
To capture some of the view of the horizon in the component, Tay wrapped part of the ceiling and wall of the living room with highly polished reflective steel. He designed a sliding screen to block the view of nearby buildings from the dining room. The sliding screen presented some challenges: since it was too large to take to the elevator, it had to be welded and spray-painted in place in the attic. The effort paid off, as the screen serves as a backdrop, he says.
Tay via Peter Tay Studio: V in Shenton’s penthouse is all about level (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
Tay sees the prospective client as a successful broker or trader in the money sector. His design technique creates anything “quiet and quiet” for interiors. “I need to create the atmosphere of a luxury hotel, like The Edison Shanghai or Aman Tokyo. – a personal and relaxed sanctuary in an urban environment,” he adds.
“The port terminal has played a vital role in Singapore’s history, and in the future will give way to the Greater Southern Waterfront,” says Tay. “This penthouse will appeal to those who understand the importance of location, its afterlife and its future. . “
With that in mind, Tay selected furniture that had a trace of nostalgia. He hands over Ralph Lauren’s table, which he says is “a classic. “The onyx and marble wall of the living room is also designed as a stage. night, when the lights in the room are off, it will be the internal illuminated detail and direct your attention to the main stage, which is the outside view,” he says.
Tay has lined the elevator lobby and front hallway with champagne gold metal panels, which draw attention in the long hallway leading to the bedrooms. The signs along the hallway are made of dark wood and “float” above the ground, and are illuminated below. The doors of the rooms are dyed in a dark color to match the wood paneling. “I designed them as makeup rooms before I took the stage,” she says.
Master bedroom designed by Peter Tay with a champagne-colored polished metal wall (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
The same taste for discreet and discreet luxury extends to the rooms. “It’s not all bling,” he says. In the Moment bedroom, which Tay designed as a child’s room, he moved the closet to a more visual position on the opposite wall. their stuff,” he adds. He added a touch of fantasy by designing the bed frame as a home.
In the master bedroom there is a champagne-colored metal wall, a continuation of the exterior. This time it has a matte and very polished contrasting finish. “You can still see the softness in it,” Tay says.
He remodeled the upper-level entertainment room into a shrine. “You can come here, go down to read or appreciate the outside view,” he says. “I looked for the area to be undeniable and clean. “
The entertainment room opens onto a spacious 230 m² (2476 sq ft) personal rooftop terrace. “It’s ideal for a corporate penthouse, as the rooftop terrace can hold an occasion for at least 50 people,” says SingLand’s Lim.
The 230 m² (2476 sq ft) rooftop terrace of the 6814-square-foot duplex penthouse is large enough for corporate events for up to 50 more people (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
Three years ago, Tay also designed the neighboring penthouse on the 53rd floor, while Topic Studio arranged the unit on the 52nd floor just below. Both sets were purchased through the same owner in December 2019.
In fact, Tay was the designer of many super penthouses: “I just finished designing the super penthouse for Binance CEO [Zhao Changpeng] at Hilltops,” he says. “I made the wonderful penthouse that James Dyson bought at Wallich Residence. “
The value of the 6,814-square-foot penthouse designed through Tay is $20. 8 million (3,053 psf). This includes a value of $1 million in furniture and accessories incorporated into the design. “We are in this penthouse to please the successful global entrepreneur, and it may just be one of their trophy houses,” says SingLand’s Lim.
The first penthouse was sold to V in Shenton, also the largest: a 7,255-square-foot duplex penthouse. The owner bought it for $13. 418 billion ($1. 849 consistent with square foot) in August 2012. It was leased for $48,000 a month in April of this year. , according to rental data from URA. La unit would have been partially furnished.
The 510-unit V in Shenton, a major 99-year lease condominium in First District 1, ended in 2017 (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
The next penthouse for sale came in January 2019, when a smaller, four-bedroom, 3,918-square-foot simplex raised $10. 08 million (2,573 psf). This agreement was negotiated through SRI.
SingLand has appointed PropNex, Huttons and SRI to market those two remaining penthouses in V on Shenton.
According to Bruce Lye, SRI’s managing spouse, owners who need a hassle-free penthouse in a position to move in will likely be attracted to those units.
Given the progression’s location in the center of the CBD and proximity to Tanjong Pagar, the penthouse worth just over $3,000 psf, as well as the interior design, “is a godsend,” he says. “The prospects are also excellent, with one penthouse offering amazing perspectives of the sea and Sentosa, and the other in the CBD and Marina Bay. “
View of CBD Core and Marina Florating Platform from the rooftop terrace of penthouse 52 (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
Lye believes that any of the penthouses will appeal to outsiders, given the convenience of their location in the CBD, where most newcomers will set up their new office.
Almost, at Wallich Residence in Tanjong Pagar, two 3509-square-foot junior penthouses on the 61st and 60th floors sold for $17. 5 million (4987 psf) and $17 million (4885 psf) in January 2020 and October 2021 respectively. Meanwhile, the 21,108-square-foot triplex Penthouse on floors 62 to 64 first purchased through Dyson for $73. 8 million (3,496 psf) in 2019, and sold more than a year later to Chinese-American Leo Koguan for $62 million (2,937 psf).
Wallich Residence sets sold through the developer ranged from $5. 1 million (2854 psf) for a 1787-square-foot unit on 40-foot land to $7. 8 million (3875 psf) for a 2013-square-foot unit on 59th floor, according to the caveats.
V-on-Shenton TVs replaced hands on the resale market at costs ranging from $1. 8 million ($1,900 foot-consistent) for a 10th two-bedroom 947-foot land to $3. 918 million ($2,200 consistent with foot) to a 1,765-foot, three-bedroom, 40-bedroom land, according to warnings filed in May.
View of Sentosa and the Tanjong Pagar port terminal, which will be part of the Greater Southern Waterfront in the long term, from the rooftop terrace of the 53rd floor penthouse (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
In addition to the remaining two penthouses, the developer still has a three-bedroom unit V for singles available in Shenton. This is a 1,765-square-foot three-bedroom unit located on the 49th floor. SingLand hired UNO Interior to design the unit, which is on the market for $4. 45 million (2521 psf). The unit offers perspectives of Marina Bay and Raffles Place, says SingLand’s Lim.
For those high-rise luxury homes, it’s the prospects that take precedence. According to Lim, V’s view in Shenton’s two penthouses would not be blocked by any long-term development. “The view of Marina Bay and Greater Southern Waterfront is priceless,” he says.
SingLand’s Lim: We enjoy engaging with those famous designers and allowing them to express their design concepts in those spaces (Photo: Samuel Isaac Chua/EdgeProp Singapore)
Location of V in Shenton on Shenton Way (Source: EdgeProp LandLens)
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