Sunday, July 8, 2012

Bald spots are evident where once green hills stood


GEORGE TOWN: As the city celebrates its fourth anniversary as a Unesco World Heritage Site, Penangites are lamenting the continual loss of their natural heritage the state's lush, green hills.
As the streets came alive yesterday to mark the proud inscription of George Town's unique history and culture, the island's landscape continues to change drastically with rapid development encroaching into the hills and the coastline.
From an aerial view, “bald” spots are evident on what used to be the island's crowning glory such as Tanjung Bungah, Sungai Ara, Paya Terubong, Relau and Bukit Gambier.
Going downhill: A high-rise condominium project has cut a path into the Mount Erskine hill.
From these bare patches, mega housing projects and high-rise developments are emerging, much to the ire of residents who claim that the existing green lungs in the state are quickly going extinct.
Penang Water Watch president Prof Dr Chan Ngai Weng warned of the negative effects of rampant hill land development and deforestation, saying that these could destroy precious water catchment areas, cause soil erosion, landslides, mudslides, downstream flooding, sediment pollution of rivers and climate change.
Penang, he pointed out, was hotter now compared to two decades ago. “This is especially so in George Town.
Threatened: A ‘bald’ spot in Bukit Gambier where a high-rise condominium project is set to emerge.
“We are now an urban heat island',” said the Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) School of Humanities lecturer.
He cautioned that things could get worse.
Rainfall, he said, was reduced now that there were fewer trees for evapotranspiration (a term describing the transport of water into the atmosphere from surfaces).
Anywhere, everywhere: Paya Terubong on the east of Penang island is also not spared of hillslope development and (below) such development seeping into the hills has become a norm in Penang.
Penang Heritage Trust president Khoo Salma Nasution said the hills were sacrosanct.
“They are our green lung, forest reserve, water reserve and a historic backdrop of a bustling city at the edge of the sea.
“Our eco-system is incredibly fragile and to develop high-rise and high density buildings on hillslopes is to set the stage for a system breakdown and ecological disaster,” she said. - The Star

Bald spots are evident where once green hills stood


GEORGE TOWN: As the city celebrates its fourth anniversary as a Unesco World Heritage Site, Penangites are lamenting the continual loss of their natural heritage the state's lush, green hills.
As the streets came alive yesterday to mark the proud inscription of George Town's unique history and culture, the island's landscape continues to change drastically with rapid development encroaching into the hills and the coastline.
From an aerial view, “bald” spots are evident on what used to be the island's crowning glory such as Tanjung Bungah, Sungai Ara, Paya Terubong, Relau and Bukit Gambier.
Going downhill: A high-rise condominium project has cut a path into the Mount Erskine hill.
From these bare patches, mega housing projects and high-rise developments are emerging, much to the ire of residents who claim that the existing green lungs in the state are quickly going extinct.
Penang Water Watch president Prof Dr Chan Ngai Weng warned of the negative effects of rampant hill land development and deforestation, saying that these could destroy precious water catchment areas, cause soil erosion, landslides, mudslides, downstream flooding, sediment pollution of rivers and climate change.
Penang, he pointed out, was hotter now compared to two decades ago. “This is especially so in George Town.
Threatened: A ‘bald’ spot in Bukit Gambier where a high-rise condominium project is set to emerge.
“We are now an urban heat island',” said the Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) School of Humanities lecturer.
He cautioned that things could get worse.
Rainfall, he said, was reduced now that there were fewer trees for evapotranspiration (a term describing the transport of water into the atmosphere from surfaces).
Anywhere, everywhere: Paya Terubong on the east of Penang island is also not spared of hillslope development and (below) such development seeping into the hills has become a norm in Penang.
Penang Heritage Trust president Khoo Salma Nasution said the hills were sacrosanct.
“They are our green lung, forest reserve, water reserve and a historic backdrop of a bustling city at the edge of the sea.
“Our eco-system is incredibly fragile and to develop high-rise and high density buildings on hillslopes is to set the stage for a system breakdown and ecological disaster,” she said. - The Star

丹绒武雅居协促勿重蹈国阵覆辙 促首长撤销高密度发展


(槟城7日讯)丹绒武雅居协向槟首长林冠英发出最后通牒令,“要他回头”,不要重蹈国阵覆辙!作为槟州其中一个活跃非政府组织的丹绒武雅居协(TBRA)在308前后立场坚定不移,争取撤销及限制山坡地等高密度高楼发展。
梁粤广:民联与国阵没两样
丹绒武雅居协主席梁粤广博士向本报记者指出,居协及当地人民的限制发展等诉求,目前只有丹绒武雅区州议员郑雨周一人独撑面对发展公司施加压力。他表示,区内选民在308后宣布选举成绩时雀跃万分,满怀希望,包括选后即急不及待的与首长林冠英、国会议员、城乡规划委员会主席黄汉伟行政议员会面洽商,然而4年后,居民认为民联与国阵没多大分别,没两样(no difference)。他说,居协要求首长林冠英关注及将丹绒武雅放回“次要发展走廊”,还原从Jalan Gajah至Mar Vista的原有每依格15单位的发展密度;“我们要他先拿出地方发展蓝图(Local Plan),限制区内发展以免造成基本硬体设施追不上发展造成的困境,比如交通阻塞等。”
梁粤广说他相信前朝国阵政府是在“仓促下”为了迎合发展利益,粗糙的涂改结构大蓝图,所以只在图表上作出颜色变动,将丹绒武雅排除在次要发展走廊,引起争议。他说,结构大蓝图下造成的谬误,使到该区发展计划朝最高密度挺进,旧有的每依格15单位提高至30,提高一倍。而他说,地方发展蓝图将会对地方的发展作出限制以迎合地方的基设,丹绒武雅不该作为高度发展,它并没有规模的政府诊疗所,没有消拯局。梁粤广称,该居协的两名前主席林惠祥至乔治亚力(George Aerie)都在任内积极向前朝及民联政府提出诉求,林惠祥即提出区内发展是在欠规划下进行,发展公司都在追求最高发展密度。他表示,该居协没有任何政治背景,在没有更好选择下,可能在选举时坐在家中,不出来投票。“既然我们不能接受国阵,林冠英又与前者没两样,只好两个都别选。”
居协愿作郑雨周后盾
这一边厢将对林冠英说不,另一边厢该居协却认同民主行动党该区议员郑雨周,更提出即使对方退出民联,成为独立候选人,居协将全力以赴,为其站岗,以取下该区议席。丹绒武雅居协主席梁粤广即表示,郑雨周在308后一直与他们同一阵线,作出各种努力以图打造一个宜居的丹绒武雅,所以即使行动党不要他,相信居协及人民都会成为其后盾。他表示,居协早在2006年即多次针对区内山坡地发展进行示威及请愿行动,然而一切徒然,造成居民在308时否决国阵,他表示,当时月光湾(Moonlight Bay)及Hilltop Villa也已开动,也向国阵提出抗议在山坡及海岸上开动的Alila及The Cove工程,这一切都枉然。- 光华

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Island LandCap plans exclusive waterfront villas in Batu Ferringhi


KUALA LUMPUR (July 6): Penang developer Island LandCap Properties Group is planning to build three exclusive waterfront villas in the popular Batu Ferringhi area in Penang. The villas will be built based on the build-then-sell concept and are expected to start construction by the second quarter of 2013.
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Oon says the Penang property market is very vibrant and generally, the properties are reasonably priced.
Executive chairman Oon Weng Boon told The Edge Financial Daily that the 50,000 sq ft tract on which the villas will be built was acquired early this year.
The European-style villas will be within a gated and guarded area and will offer built-ups of about 9,000 to 10,000 sq ft and are indicatively priced between RM15 million and RM25 million. Each of the 4-storey villas comes with a home lift.
“This is a blue chip property… a class above the ordinary. I am not in a hurry to sell them. Marketing for the villas will start early next year and we are looking at buyers from Singapore, Hong Kong and the UK,” Oon said.
The first project by the developer is Taman Tun Hussein Onn in Seberang Jaya, Seberang Perai in 2001, with a gross development value (GDV) of RM30 million.
Among its completed projects is Cassia Resort Condominium in Jalan Raja Uda, Butterworth, which was one of the few projects there built with full condominium facilities.
Launched in 2006 for RM150,000 with built-ups of 1,150 sq ft, units there have recently changed hands on the secondary market for RM300,000 each.
In total, the developer has completed projects with a total GDV of RM400 million. Meanwhile, the developer is currently developing an integrated condominium development on a 7-acre (2.8ha) plot in Butterworth which is said to be the first project in Butterworth with a private water park.
An artist’s impression of the Pinang Laguna, Palma Laguna and Laguna Indah projects.
It comprises two medium-cost condominium developments namely Pinang Laguna (27-storey) and Palma Laguna (38-storey), as well as Laguna Indah apartment (16-storey) with GDV of RM80 million, RM100 million and RM20 million respectively. Pinang Laguna and Palma Laguna, which were launched in 2010 and early 2011, are fully sold.
The two towers share the 50,000 sq ft facilities area and Pinang Laguna units were sold around RM190 psf to RM290 psf. Palma Laguna units with an average built-up of 1,070 sq ft were sold between RM250 and RM290 psf. Laguna Indah, offering 220 units, has been open for registration since last month.
On the Penang property market, Oon said: “I think it is a very vibrant market and generally, properties are reasonably priced. For Island LandCap, my short term plan is to make the company an IPO-ready company by 2016 or 2017.”
Penang-born Oon, who is a Universiti Sains Malaysia physics graduate, started out as a negotiator for Henry Butcher in 1994 upon graduation. “I always had a passion for property development. Growing up, I used to admire the new developments around me as well as the entrepreneurship of the developers.
After a little over six years as a negotiator, I quit and started my own company. I think it is important to be passionate in what you do. When you promise the buyers a property that is of good quality, make sure you deliver on time,” he said.
This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily July 6, 2012.

Out of necessity in the Klang Valley


THE redevelopment and regeneration of huge swathes of Kuala Lumpur and other parts of the Klang Valley is taking on a fresh fervour with new residential and commercial projects set to juxtapose with the existing city skyline and landscape.
The upcoming regeneration projects that will change the skyline and landscape of the Klang Valley include that of the new Kuala Lumpur International Financial District (KLIFD) at the old government quarters at Jalan Tun Razak; Bandar Malaysia at the former Royal Malaysia Air Force site in Sungai Besi; Warisan Merdeka in Stadium Merdeka and Stadium Negara; and the redevelopment of Pudu Jail.
There are also the planned redevelopment of the Pekeliling Flats at Jalan Tun Razak and the former Wisma Angkasa Raya building in Jalan Ampang.
In the Klang Valley, the development of the 3,300 acres of the Rubber Research Institute land in Sungei Buloh has also hyped up much interest among industry players.
According to Mah Sing Group Bhd group managing director and chief executive officer Tan Sri Leong Hoy Kum, the scarcity of prime land in good locations as well as rising cost of good land and properties have made it more commercially viable to redevelop land.
“These kind of land generally serves an established demographic, and the projects will be able to attract a ready target market,” he says.
Leong says redevelopment is a good way to effectively utilise prime landbanks, unlock land value, and pursue new projects that cater to current market needs.
These projects will hopefully raise Kuala Lumpur's liveability index and catapult it to join the ranks of the other global cities.
“At the same time, it is also important to give due consideration to whether the proposed sites have buildings with historical importance or architectural significance. With input from all stakeholders and with careful planning, a win-win solution can be reached.”
Leong points out that the Kuala Lumpur Central Market is a good example of a redeveloped project as it holds historical importance and architectural significance due to its strong art deco design language, and its ability to be re-purposed to modern needs.
“Back in 1888, it used to be an open wet market and by the 1930's a permanent structure was put up. Towards the end of 1970s, the Malaysian Heritage Society decided to preserve the building under its heritage programme. It is now a tourist attraction and a one stop shopping centre for local products such as handicraft, art, kebaya, songket, batik and a wide variety of Malaysian cuisines,” Leong says.
Benefits of regeneration
Property consultancy CB Richard Ellis executive director Paul Khongsays redevelopment projects will bring back vibrancy to the city and if done right, this renewal factor will continue to enhance property values.
“A good and new major redevelopment project like the KLCC can turn around the entire locality into a popular neighbourhood, change the focus of the super prime locations in the city, increase capital values and demand, and change the real estate value patterns of the entire neighbourhood,” Khong points out.
He notes that although the authorities are moving in the right direction with regard to redevelopment initiatives, “there must be a well-planned and holistic approach to this effort.”
“It is necessary to adopt a well planned approach in the redevelopment process and proper town planning must be done with the relevant authorities taking into account or anticipate the problems which are also associated with such redevelopment projects.
“I think we need a mechanism like Singapore's where a general consensus from about 80% of the unit owners are required to allow for a redevelopment of their own residential project. A strong legislation on this aspect will be welcomed,” Khong adds.
Wong says while the redevelopment of major parcels of land in and around Kuala Lumpur is healthy as it is part of a regeneration process of the city, “the scale of all these developments is too much and will create an oversupply in the property market and affect property values.”
“Hence, all these redevelopment projects have to be phased to take into consideration the supply and demand in the property market. Otherwise, the planned projects will generate millions of square feet of residential towers, hotels, office blocks and shopping malls.
“Based on the moderate economic growth of about 5% for the next three years and with Malaysia recording a net negative outflow of investments to the tune of RM48.9bil from 2009 to 2011, there will be not enough effective demand to absorb the millions of square feet of these upcoming developments,” Wong cautions.
He says DBKL as the planning authority has a role to play to regulate the supply by providing planning approvals on a staggered basis instead of giving blanket approvals.
And the banks also have a role to play by insisting on market and financial feasibility studies to ensure the viability of a project prior to granting bank loan approval.
“The Greater Kuala Lumpur covers an area of 2,793.27 sq km and is administered by 10 municipalities surrounding Kuala Lumpur. Each local authority and municipality currently acts independently on planning approvals without referring to the planning approvals of the other neighbouring municipalities. Amongst the 10 municipalities, there should be a coordinating committee to oversee the planning application and planning approval of large development projects.
“The coordinating committee should carry out studies on the impact of these projects to the property market and the environment. This is to enable developers to have greater awareness of the incoming supply and they will be able to better plan and phase out their developments. Such a measure will help to minimise another crisis similar to the Asian financial crisis of 1998 where many commercial buildings and large projects in Kuala Lumpur failed and were abandoned,” Wong explains.
To avoid such a potential situation, Wong echoes Khong's calls for the local authorities to emulate the planning model of Singapore's Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA).
“Singapore's URA's planning is so systematic. They will ensure all properties are developed and used according to the master plan for each individual lot parcel. The URA will only release land parcel for sale for redevelopment purposes if there is effective demand in that particular location, and for each land parcel, there are clear cut planning guidelines of the number of storeys, type of uses, density, and the number of car parks a developer can built,” Wong says.
DTZ Nawawi Tie Leung executive director Brian Koh says given the escalating land cost and the need to better utilise scare land resources, there is a lot of potential to redevelop the older properties in the capital city.
“These projects will bring back life, commercial activities and value to blighted areas within the city centre, and create an anchor for the revitalisation of the entire area.
“The potential impact to the property's value and the overall property landscape will be significant over the long run. An anchor project will help to trigger off the forces, so it will help if we have a financially strong consortium to manage such projects, especially if it involves a big area that need acquiring and putting capital into,” Koh says.
Maintaining heritage
Koh also points out the need to take into account conservation issues for the older parts of the city where there are cultural or architectural heritages.
VPC Alliance's James Wong concurs with Koh on the need to preserve and restore heritage and historical buildings.
“Many old buildings in KL's city centre are of neo classical and the art deco design, and such buildings should be preserved and restored,” Wong says.
He says the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) has a policy involving redevelopment of high rise buildings whereby a developer has to maintain the front facade and allow redevelopment of the balance of the building to a higher density. “This is so that the face' of the old buildings will still maintain its character.”
He stresses that the charm of a city is in the old buildings, “hence old buildings should be restored and the front facade of the original building be maintained.”
“The Government encourages the preservation of historical buildings including those of the Portuguese, Dutch and British periods by providing consultancy services on the proper way to carry out the conservation work. The public's attitude towards building conservation is also gradually changing since the successful adaptation and reuse of the Kuala Lumpur Central Market.”
Wong says the government has appointed organisations such as Malaysia Heritage Trust, DBKL's Conservation and Townscape Unit, and the Museum and Antiquity Department of the National Museum to implement, monitor and supervise conservation activities of old buildings. - The Star

The pros and cons of redeveloping used land


SOME call it urban renewal, others prefer to call it regeneration. Yet there are those who prefer a less politically charged term like transformation. By whatever name it is called, each of these involve changes to land use.
The last several years, the Government announced several mega projects which involve some form of change in the use of land. There is the Sungei Besi Airport, which involves the conversion of an airport and its surrounding land into a mixed commercial project where hotels, service apartments and retail commercial space will be incorporated. In the case of the Sungai Buloh Rubber Research Institute, that involves the change of agricultural land to commercial use.
While both involve changes of considerable degree, the first is a redevelopement, while the second is development. The dropping of the “re” carries huge connotation. In the case of development, the landowner has the mandate to plan what he wants out of that piece of land. He can carve it out how he pleases, in whatever shapes and sizes. He can allocate different purposes for each of the parcels he has carved out and can plan the timeline for each of the parcel and why the development of one should precede another, a developer in Section 13 says.
He is the master planner. And his task begins on a clean slate where he wants to put the different buildings, and whether there will be a library for each of the community he plans to build on that piece of land.
In the case of redevelopment, that freedom to do as he pleases may not be available, especially where the acreage is small, and on both sides gleaming structures are already in place. His task is to give new uses to the land but within narrow bands. He may demolish the tired-looking commercial building and put in a new one. He does not have wide perimeters to seek changes to the land use, simply because that would be dictated by land laws, which differs state to state. The above is a simplistic explanation between development and redevelopment. There are many legal and social issues that have been omitted about land use.
In the Klang Valley, because of the high premium put on land, every little bit of empty land is used even when the structure is an eye sore. In other words, there is a lot of ad hoc development going on and some of these structures may seem totally out of place and out of sync with the environment.
As one drives along the highway, out of nowhere, a boxy monstrous structure emerges from what used to be a field. Because the approval has been given, the road infrastructure has to change in order to provide access to that building and traffic has to be detoured and directions to enter the building have to be put up to lead traffic there.
On one hand, it may benefit the authorities as an empty field generates no taxes, and they will have to pay staff to maintain the field. On the other hand, the community has lost another open space.
It is a balance between revenue and social cause. Currently, the regeneration or renewal that occurs in and around the Klang Valley are economic driven, says a town planner.
A developer who purchased a factory lot in Section 13, Petaling Jaya says when it was a factory, it was generating taxes of about RM40,000 a year to the local authorities. After he has put up the structure redevelopment has taken place the project is generating revenue of about RM900,000 for the local authorities.
The same applies to the many serviced apartments that are coming up in that area. Serviced apartments, although with a strong residential element, are built on commercial titles. It generates a lot more revenue for the authorities than something that is on residential title. While it is revenue generating for the authorities, it is money depleting for those who buy into such projects because taxes and utilities are 25%-30% higher. These are issues that local authorities should consider as they approve a project on commercial land status. The same explanation applies to density. The higher a building, the more offices and residences and the higher the revenue it generates for the town council.
Which takes us to the next question: Should renewal benefit the people or the developer and local authorities? It should not be a zero sum game.
Models for urban renewal
There are many models for urban renewal. In the case of Kampung Baru, it involves a parliamentary process. In Malaysia, and other parts of the world, land use is a political matter. It is also a state matter. Which may be the reason why there is no one-size-fits-all urban renewal policy.
While the renewal of Kampung Baru is one model, it is a political decision and involves many stakeholders, there are other simpler models of urban renewal. A town planner who declined to be named says the changes that are still in progress in Section 13 in Petaling Jaya is another model, and one which is vastly different from that of the Kampung Baru renewal process.
In this particular case, the landowners themselves took charge.
“The collaboration among landowners in Section 13 would be among the more cohesive although there are challenges. Some of them had invested heavily in machinery and were not ready to move until land prices move further up.
“Other landowners did not want to go into the challenges of becoming developers,” says a town planner who declined to be quoted. So they sell out to developers who are able to see the opportunities that such a proposition offers.
Parcel by parcel, the land continues to change hands. Says the principal of a real estate company: “There is huge demand with land prices fronting Jalan Semangat going for about RM400 per sq ft or thereabouts.”
Among the most popular form of developments seem to be high-rise serviced apartments targeted at the young professionals. Centrestage project by Cherish Springs Sdn Bhd will have 1,160 comprising 352 units of serviced suites and 775 office suites. There will also be 33 units of retail shops.
F&N too is planning a RM1.6bil mixed development in its ex-dairy premises in Section 13. Approval for a F&N tower, a hotel, offices, retail outlets and residential suites is pending.
The Pacific Star, with a gross development value of about RM900mil, will have about 260 serviced apartments and office tower and office suites.
The project will be undertaken by developer Island Circle Development (M) Sdn Bhd, who is also building the 21-storey Pacific 63 at PJ Central, near Jaya One. Another serviced apartment project in that location is Avenue D'Vogue, with 300 units, by the Inspiration group. More of such projects are expected in the future.
Inter-connectivity
With traffic flow being a concern, local town planner Ahmad Jefri Clyde, the director of Garis Architects, has suggested inter-connectivity within the buildings in Section 13 in order to reduce traffic on the roads in that area.
This loose cohesive structure came about because landowners were not agreeable to the proposal given by the authorities initially, which resulted in them coming together on a single platform to seek the help of a planner.
This was the “workable model” for Section 13, the town planner says. There are a myriad of models.
In the case of PJ Sentral, the regeneration work undertaken by Gapurna Sdn Bhd is slightly different. Gapurna owns the 12 acres located behind PJ Hilton and set up a company PJ Sentral Sdn Bhd to construct new structures after it has demolished existing ones. That is the plan.
Gapurna's director Imran Salim says the plan is to have another hotel in the area, which will be competition for PJ Hilton, which is owned byTradewinds Corporation Bhd.
“Gapurna's objective is to develop a business district in that 12 acres to complement the surrounding areas like PJ 8 and other upcoming developments in that area,” says Imran, adding that there is a need for critical mass.
“There is a need for a business district within Petaling Jaya,” Imran says. The projects he is considering will have a gross development value of RM2.2bil.
Currently, what Petaling Jaya has are commercial areas located in each of the housing areas. Although PJ New Town used to be a centre of activities, the lack of work done there to renew the place has resulted in much of the renewal being carried out today outside the PJ New Town Centre. It is happening in Gapurna's PJ Sentral behind PJ Hilton and across the Federal Highway near the Tun Hussein Onn Hospital.
This trail of renewal continues on to Section 13, as a source from the Petaling Jaya City Council says. In a way, it is this lack of focus to plan a proper district which has resulted in ad hoc groupings of new buildings and office towers coming together with serviced apartments. A single thread links them all, they are all built on commercial land status, which generate much revenue for the council.
But spanking new buildings, hundreds of small apartments ranging from 500 sq ft onwards and retail may not amount to successful renewal of a township.
Road infrastructures, open space and parks with ponds and other water features, recreational areas which may take the form of sports fields, libraries and games courts are part of the renewal equation. Unfortunately, these important pieces of the puzzle are missing in the regeneration that is happening today.
Economics vs social benefits
Often, one may have heard about the proliferation of malls in Petaling Jaya and Kuala Lumpur and the weekends are used visiting one mall or another. That is because there is an abundance of malls around us. One one drives along Lebuhraya Damansara-Puchong, a monstrous brown building has emerged next to the highway. But are there new parks? This is a question only the populace can address and demand from their local representatives.
Renewal is not only happening in Petaling Jaya. It is also happening in Kuala Lumpur. Recently, Tradewinds Corp Bhd said it will demolish the Crown Plaza Mutiara Hotel and Kompleks Antarabangsa to make way for the RM6bil Tradewinds Centre project. The company said the project will take about seven years to complete and is expected to commence in early 2013. The project will be built on a 2.8ha at Jalan Sultan Ismail, Kuala Lumpur.
This is another model of renewal. In this particular case, two buildings will give way to several because the new structures will go upwards.
The integration of Bukit Bintang Plaza (BB Plaza) and possibly the Yayasan Selangor building adjacent to it with the My Rapid Transit station in the new structure is yet another model. In this particular case, it is value-adding to regeneration because a new service, in this case a public rail project, will be incorporated.
Which takes us to yet another question? Should renewal benefit the community and the rakyat? Certainly, otherwise, what's the objective of the renewal process if it were to benefit only the local authorities, or the developers or in this case, MRT Co?
Should it be purely economically driven? No, there has to be a balance. In the case of the BB Plaza, public transportation will be improved by leaps and bounds with the rail service. It provides connectivity and at the same time, enables access and connectivity to business and commerce. It will also help to reduce congestion.
While the inclusion of rail transport is a service, what good or value add do parks and green lung offer? As more people live in high-rise, and even if they do not, there is a need to link with the environment, with trees and parklands, to have a bit of space. In short, to get away from the maddening crowd.
If one were to consider some of the world's most expensive and desirable properties, be it an office or a sanctuary to return to after a hard day's work, chances are these properties are located next to or on a park or some green open space. Consider Hyde Park in London, Central Park in New York, Hyde Park in Sydney.
Closer home, there is the KLCC Park and The Binjai on the Park. Incidentally, that too involves a change in land use. That location used to be a race course, today it houses some of Malaysia's most desirable real estate. There is money to be generated in open space, but this channel is slower and more sustainable and more beneficial to the populace than just plonking a mall next to the highway, or a high-rise residential development next to a set of traffic lights.
City Hall and Petaling Jaya City Council did not respond to questions or attempts to seek interviews with them. - The Star

Plans for AWLU project to go ahead, says CM


GEORGE TOWN: The Penang government will stand by its decision to acquire a 40ha plot of land for the construction of a higher education institution for women in Balik Pulau.
Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng said the Asian Women Leadership University (AWLU) had been offered alternative sites but the latter insisted on Kampung Genting.
“This university is unique and as its chief academic planning partner is the renown Smith College (USA), I believe that it will truly be an education centre of excellence, prehaps more famous than even Universiti Sains Malaysia.
“We have very high hopes for this project which will benefit the future generations,” he told a press conference here yesterday.
He said the land in question had been gazetted as an educational excellence hub but was not acquired by the state previously.
Lim also produced a copy of a letter dated June 12 from Minister in the Prime Minister’s Depart-ment Datuk Seri Idris Jala to the state government stating that the Education NKEA Steering Committee chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin approved AWLU.
“The letter states that Pemandu will facilitate the processes while licensing will be subjected to Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE) guidelines.
“We were also asked to enable the transfer of land to the AWLU Malaysian Foundation,” he said.
Lim, who met with some 40 landowners on Tuesday night, said they understood the need for the acquisition but wanted “good compensation”.
“The amount will be determined by the Valuation and Property Services Department which is under the Finance Ministry,” he said.
He said AWLU was a project suggested by the Federal Government and accepted by the state government in the interest of the people.
On Wednesday, Kampung Genting Village Development and Security Committee (JKKK) chairman Rosman Long led more than 50 people to protest against the state government’s land acquisition in front of Masjid Jamek Kampung Genting.
The landowners had received notices from the state secretary’s office on June 29 informing them about the land acquisition by the state for the construction of the AWLU. - The Star

Caveat on Prima homes


KUALA LUMPUR: The Government is unlikely to allow 1Malaysia Housing Programme (Prima) homes to be re-sold at market prices after the 10-year moratorium.
Syarikat Perumahan Negara Bhd (SPNB) managing director Prof Datuk Dr Kamarul Rashdan Salleh said the Government might buy back the units if owners decide to sell them after the tenth year.
“They (owners) cannot sell it in the open market. I think the Government will enforce that,” he said after the “Affordable Housing: A Fact or Fiction?” panel discussion during the 3rd Annual Affordable Housing Projects conference on Wednesday.
Dr Kamarul said the Government was still contemplating all options.
On Monday, Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Seri Chor Chee Heung said that the Government was using unused federal land to build 42,078 affordable homes for families who earned less than RM5,000.
The units, which cost between RM150,000 and RM300,000, would be built in 20 locations in the Klang Valley, Rawang and Seremban.
He also said that while the owners would be given the units at a lower price, they would not enjoy the appreciation of prices as compared to those buying non-subsidised properties.
The discussion moderator, Australia's Housing Choices international adviser and former chief executive officer Michael Lennon said there was a need for a clear national policy.
In a question-and-answer session, Surbana International Consultants Pte Ltd director (Strategy and Branding) Ng Beng Eng said that governments should spearhead effective intervention efforts for affordable homes and the private sector could later be roped in. - The Star

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Finger-pointing reaches new heights


The Penang Chief Minister says he has not approved a single development project above 76m but his top city official says 19 such projects were approved after 2008. Who is telling the truth?
PENANG island is having a bumper season for “designer durians” and tourists and locals alike have been making their way up the hills of Balik Pulau to feast on the fruit. It has been a sweet season indeed for farmers of the thorny fruit.
But elsewhere on the island, it is the season for another kind of thorns, namely, the thorny issue of development and its side effects.
The hot-button issue in Penang today is too much development, for want of a better word. This is quite an irony because one of the reasons why Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon was shown the door in 2008 was because Penang folk thought there was not enough development in Penang.
As the well-connected developer Tan Sri Tan Kok Ping had claimed of Dr Koh during an interview, “18 years and nothing to show”, by way of saying that Dr Koh could have done more for developers in Penang.
Dr Koh was not known to be pro-developer and a couple of big developers were so cheesed off with his policies they left Penang and returned only after Lim Guan Eng came to power.
It is a different situation today. Entire neighbourhoods have been uncomfortable about the pace and type of development taking place. Guan Eng, like it or not, has acquired a reputation as being too pro-developer.
“In recent years and more so in recent months, there has been a spate of protests from angry residents in various parts of Penang island over what is happening in their communities.
“This is not an isolated incident. It is quite widespread,” said city councillor Dr Lim Mah Hui.
The curious thing is that the protests are taking place in upscale areas like Pulau Tikus, Tanjung Bungah and Sungai Ara. Middle-class folk are coming out with home-made placards to protest against projects that are affecting the quality of life in their neighbourhoods.
Last week, residents in Pulau Tikus protested against plans for a 27-storey commercial block where the maximum height is only six storeys. The residents were totally appalled because Pulau Tikus is already plagued by traffic jams and parking woes. They bombarded their assemblyman Koay Teng Hai with all sorts of questions.
All these, said Mah Hui, are signals that “something is not quite right”.
In recent days, pamphlets of “before” and “after” Google Earth images of the famed Batu Ferringhi coastline have been flying about. The pictures show how green hills have become concrete and tarmac. The “after” images were dated around 2010, resulting in DAP claiming that the images were digitally tampered with. The war over development has escalated.
Guan Eng has, as usual, blamed the previous government for the state of affairs. He has repeatedly said that his administration has not approved a single project above 76m except for green areas like a park. He repeated all that last week at a press conference alongside Penang Island City Council (MPPP) president Patahiyah Ismail.
Patahiyah, on her part, released details of 37 projects above 76m that were approved between 1985 and March 2008 under Dr Koh’s government – yes, Dr Koh was guilty as charged.
However, Patahiyah also handed out documents showing that between April 2008 and May 2012, a total of 19 projects on land above 76m were given planning approval by the MPPP; that would fall squarely under Guan Eng’s tenure.
It left many reporters scratching their heads because the Chief Minister and Patahiyah were saying opposite things about the same matter. Guan Eng said there was no approval of projects above 76m after 2008, but Patahiyah said 19 projects were approved.
They had contradicted each other at the same press conference and they seem to have gotten away with it! It was pretty amazing.
To add to this, Ong Eu Soon, a social activist often quoted on development issues in Penang, has disputed Guan Eng’s claim that his government has not approved a single development that is above 76m.
Ong did his own investigation and he has insisted that a high-rise condominium project in the Air Itam area was approved in 2009 and it is sitting well over 76m above sea level. The project is on a beautiful hill known as Bukit Hijau and is currently under construction.
According to Ong, the project, listed under the reference number of MPPP/OSC/PB(1963)/09, was approved on April 30, 2009. The developer then applied to amend the plan from a 29-storey apartment project to 38 storeys. The amendment got the green light from MPPP on Oct 14, 2009.
“The project is definitely more than 76m high because the completed project on the slope below was classified as above 76m. The completed project was approved by the Barisan Nasional government but the new one was approved by Guan Eng’s government.
“I live within walking distance of the two projects. Guan Eng should stop saying he has not approved any development higher than 76m because this is just one case. I have more information on this type of projects that were approved after March 2008,” said Ong who also contributes articles to Malaysian Insider and Malaysiakini.
It has been all too convenient for Guan Eng to blame the previous government for everything that goes wrong in Penang. After four years in power, Guan Eng should stop pointing and blaming and start looking at his own administration.
He is the chairman of two of the most powerful committees in the state, namely, the State Planning Committee and the State Land Committee. He should provide some answers about his MPPP president’s confirmation that 19 projects above 76m were approved after 2008.
Governing Penang, as many politicians have learnt, is like opening a durian. It is a delicious fruit but its thorns can hurt. It has to be handled with care. - The Star

Bank Negara expected to keep interest rate steady at 3%


PETALING JAYA: Bank Negara is expected to keep the overnight rate policy (OPR) unchanged at 3% at its monetary policy committee meeting scheduled today as the domestic economy is still resilient enough to face external headwinds from the eurozone.
Bank Islam Research said Bank Negara might possibly choose to keep the OPR unchanged at 3% at this juncture.
“The threat to growth prospects has intensified but not collapsed and there are signs of resilience in domestic demand.
“Furthermore, there appears to be some relief, albeit possibly short-term, in financial markets after European Union (EU) leaders took steps to solve the fiscal debt crisis and concerns over risks of financial imbalances may also nudge Bank Negara to lean toward keeping the monetary policy unchanged over the immediate-term,” it said in a report yesterday.
Nevertheless, should Bank Negara unexpectedly lower the OPR as a pre-emptive measure against downside risk to global growth, Bank Islam expected policymakers to move at a moderate and measured pace and a reduction of more than 25 basis points (bps) in the OPR to below 2.75% was not envisaged.
Malaysia Rating Corp Bhd also did not foresee Bank Negara undertaking such a step in the near term due to the respectable growth performance in first quarter of this year. Athough the economy might continue to moderate in the near term, it should not be sufficient to induce the central bank to rush into a more accommodative stance.
“In addition, policymakers will likely be extra cautious about fiddling with the OPR as there is limited pass-through from short-term rates to longer-term borrowing rates and thus overall economic activity.
“Also, an overly accommodative monetary policy is inconsistent with Bank Negara efforts to contain expansion in already overstretched household balance sheets in the economy and the capacity utilisation rate in the manufacturing sector has continued to be above its median level,” it said in an economic research report.
Citi Investment Research also expected the OPR to remain at 3% for the rest of 2012, even though the July statement could strike a more dovish tone.
“Bank Negara governor has reiterated recently that interest rates remain appropriate' as the domestic economy continues to hold up.
“Inflation concerns have taken a backseat for now, as May headline consumer price index inflation fell further to 1.7% year-on-year on falling transport prices, though core inflation (ex food and transport) also ticked down.
“Nonetheless lingering pipeline pressures on core remain, especially if domestic demand picks up in the second half of theyear on the back of pre-election fiscal spending. Growth will have to slow much more sharply, with a material loss of jobs and/or contraction in credit, before concerns household debt are overcome and rate cuts are serious consideration,” it said. - The Star