Monday, April 15, 2013

Tourists like the historical attraction of boutique heritage hotels


Unique feature: The facade of China Tiger Studio Apartment. Wilkinson says the apartments enjoy good response from visitors from China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Scandinavia and Europe.Unique feature: The facade of China Tiger Studio Apartment. Wilkinson says the apartments enjoy good response from visitors from China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Scandinavia and Europe.
BOUTIQUE heritage hotels in Penang are expected to see occupancy rates of around 70% this year, compared to approximately 66% a year ago, riding on overseas arrivals.
Malaysian Association of Hotels (MAH) Penang Chapter vice-chairman Andy Fong said that this would be the best year for occupancy rates in boutique heritage hotels, since the trend of providing high-end lodging in prime heritage properties located in George Town took off five years ago.
“Since 2008, the occupancy rate has increased gradually from 50% yearly,” he said.
Fong said an increase could be expected as more mid- to high-end travellers worldwide are now more aware of George Town’s World Heritage Site status (WHS) awarded by Unesco in 2008.
The increase in more direct flights to Penang from the Asean and the Asia Pacific regions also helps to boost the tourist arrivals for the boutique heritage hotels business in George Town, Fong added.
There are presently about 17 boutique heritage hotels, with fewer than 50 rooms, priced from RM400 per night to RM2,000 per night, in George Town.
Fong, who is also the general manager of 23 Love Lane, a boutique heritage hotel, said the guests are predominantly from China, Hong Kong, Japan, Australia the UK, the US, and France.
“Overseas visitors comprise 70% of guests in boutique heritage hotels, while the remainder are domestic travellers,” he said.
Clean sheets: 23 Lovelane Penang boutique heritage hotel housekeeper Yee Chew Yet preparing a room.Clean sheets: 23 Lovelane Penang boutique heritage hotel housekeeper Yee Chew Yet preparing a room.
Fong said what attracts foreign visitors to boutique heritage hotels in inner George Town is the way the projects are being restored for adaptive commercial use.
“The intricacies of restoration work and the antique furniture used determine the pricing of the rooms per night.
“Our guests are interested in the details of the restoration and do not mind the rates, which are still very competitive compared to a similar range of hotels in the region.
“The furniture for 23 Love Lane, Penang, for example, comes from the 19th century Straits Settlement period,” he said.  
No. 23 Love Lane, comprising 10 rooms with built-up areas of 500sq ft to 3,000sq ft, sells its rooms from RM500 per night to RM2,800 per night.
The Straits Settlements were a group of British territories located in South-East Asia, established in 1826 as part of the territories controlled by the British East India Company, which came under direct British control as a crown colony on April 1, 1867. 
The colony was dissolved in 1946 as part of the British reorganisation of its South-East Asian dependencies following the end of the Second World War.
The Straits Settlements consisted of the four individual settlements of Malacca, Dinding, Penang, and Singapore.
Penang Global Tourism director Ooi Geok Lin said the total number of tourists who spent at least a night in Penang in 2012 totalled about 6.09 million, a slight increase of 1.22% from 6.02 million in 2011, according to Tourism Malaysia statistics.
Award-winning hotel: The exterior view of Macalister Mansion at Macalister Road.Award-winning hotel: The exterior view of Macalister Mansion at Macalister Road.
“The figure is expected to rise by 5% this year.
“About 2.99 million of the arrivals for last year’s figure comprised domestic visitors, while the remaining 3.096 million were foreign visitors,” Ooi said.  
Hotel Penaga on Hutton Lane, which is owned by Pelindung Dahan Sdn Bhd, is also experiencing higher occupancy rates since the beginning of this year.
Pelindung Dahan director Angela Hijjas said so far this year, the monthly occupancy rate of the 45-room boutique  heritage hotel had doubled, compared to the same period a year ago.
“Some 30% of our guests are local visitors.
“To enable our guests to enjoy and understand more about the unique local culture, we run an artist residency programme for artists to socialise with hotel guests in the studio a few evenings a week, for which the hotel provides refreshments.
“Original artwork from the region is hung in all the rooms and public spaces, as well as a collection of Chinese embroideries, carvings, maps and paintings from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  We find many of our guests are interested to meet artists who work in Penang, to share experiences and gain insight into the city,” she said.
Hijjas said about RM10mil was spent to renovate the 15 heritage properties into a boutique heritage hotel.
That the  local boutique heritage hotel industry is gaining international recognition and attention is evident in Macalister Mansion winning the coveted gold award for best luxury hotel design given by the Annual Hospitality, Design, Furniture Luxurious Projects Asia Summit & Awards 2013.
Looking good: The Super 8 hotel at Tye Sin Street.Looking good: The Super 8 hotel at Tye Sin Street.
“We won the award recently in March for the hotel’s unique location and specially commissioned art work.
“It will certainly help to boost Macalister Mansion’s reputation in Asia, especially among high-end travellers who are looking to experience authentic heritage ambience and first-class boutique hotel services,” said a Macalister Mansion spokesperson.
The Macalister Mansion (formerly the Choong Lye Hock Mansion) sits on a 48,943sq ft site on Macalister Road. Its eight rooms are priced from RM800 and onwards a night.
Since it started business last November, it has received a good response from visitors from the UK, Australia, Hong Kong, and Singapore. It is also popular with Malaysian travellers.
The Hospitality, Design, Furniture Luxurious Projects Asia Summit & Awards was created in 2012 to foster links and harness synergies between hospitality, design and furniture industries as well as promoting design excellence and trends in Asia’s luxury development project.
China Tiger Studio Apartments proprietor Rebecca Wilkinson said boutique heritage hotels have more to offer than just history.
“We leverage not just on the restoration works that have gone into the heritage properties, but also on the uniqueness of inner George Town, which has other tangibles and intangibles.
“The tangibles are the heritage properties, while the intangibles are the people involved in the traditional trades and crafts living in the inner city.
“Besides Florence in Italy, there are only a handful of cities worldwide with the size of George Town that have the WHS status,” she said.
Wilkinson runs two studio apartments with built-up areas of 1,300sq ft each on China Street, which has proven popular with visitors from China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Scandinavia and Europe.
“We rent out to families in the mid- to high-income range for long- and short-term stays at rates of RM500 per night,” she added.
Wilkinson said that the renovations for China Tiger provide the comfort of modern living, while simultaneously retaining much of what is original in the interior.
“This is what we understand by restoring heritage properties for modern-day commercial use,” she said.
Real estate in Penang is still cheap, compared to other countries in the region, according to Wilkinson.
“This is why foreigners are interested to invest in heritage properties in inner George Town, taking advantage of the WHS status,” she said.
The cost to restore a heritage building for adaptive commercial use is around RM300 to RM400 per sq ft, depending on the quality of finishings used.
Meanwhile, budget hotels in George Town are finding it difficult to maintain the same occupancy rates as a year ago.
The Malaysian Budget Hotel Association (MBHA) Penang Chapter) secretary Arthur Chin said, last year, the budget hotels in George Town registered occupancy rates of about 66% .
“This year it will be difficult to maintain, due to more hotel rooms being made available in the market among all categories of hotels.
“The occupancy rate for this year may also drop,” he said.
There are 85 budget hotels providing 3,000 rooms in Penang.
Chin said, although tourist arrivals have risen, the number is still not sufficient to sustain the budget hotel segment, which sells rooms at less than RM200 per night.
Super 8 Hotel chief executive officer Alex Loo also said the first quarter of this year was slower than the corresponding period the previous year.
The Super 8 is a 50-room budget hotel located in Tye Sin Street, priced from RM88 to RM148 per night.
“The occupancy for last year was around 70% for Super 8, but we expect the occupancy to drop this year, due to more competition.
“To increase our market share, we have invested about RM9mil for another budget hotel in Bayan Baru, which is now becoming a popular area for business travellers to stay, as it is a stone’s throw away from the Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone,” he said.
Loo said the group’s 8 Boutique by the Sea @ Tanjung Tokong had just opened for business.
“We are pricing the rooms around RM100 to RM150 until the end of next month. After that, the room rates will be from RM200 per night onwards,” he said. - The Star

Choo dreams of bringing celebrity friends to Penang home


GEORGE TOWN: Penang-born international fashion icon Datuk Jimmy Choo has bought his first property in his home-state – a townhouse in the palatial Y Cantonments in Canton­ment Road.
“This is the first property I have purchased here since I left for Britain as a child. I’m buying a townhouse as my Penang residence.
“Now that I will have a home in Penang again, I intend to invite all my superstar friends to visit my hometown,” he quipped.
Choo’s six-bedroom, four-storey townhouse, located about 400m from the Pulau Tikus market, will be ready by 2015 and is one of 20 exclusive units to be built by The Yeangs Sdn Bhd. Piling for the project has already started.
The units, to measure almost 2,000sq m, are priced up to RM4.4mil. Half have already been snapped up in the neighbourhood made up of Penang’s rich and famous.
Choo’s residence will have a private rooftop garden, private elevator made of glass and the master bedroom will take up the entire third floor.
It will also have a private plunge pool and an open-air shower and deck. Choo, who made his fortune designing exclusive shoes for Britain’s royalty and superstars, said he was also eyeing several other properties in Penang.
“Penang has the potential to grow into a world-class economic and education centre. I have been away for decades and seen so much around the world.
“I see a lot of possibilities for Penang,” said Choo, who has been an Officer of the Order of the British Empire since 2003.
He said he chose Y Cantonments as he was impressed with its “sustainability design”.
“I am attracted to the eco-friendly elements in the architecture such as the rainwater harvesting system and low energy design,” he explained. - The Star

‘Question Penang tunnel plan’


GEORGE TOWN: The people of Penang should question if there is any justification for the proposed 6.5km Gurney Drive-Bagan Ajam undersea tunnel project, said an Australian town planner.
“Why do you need it? What is the implication and who is it going to affect?” asked Dr Peter R. Jensen, who arrived here yesterday to speak at a forum organised by the Penang Citizens Awareness Chant Group (Chant) tomorrow.
The Johor-born Dr Jensen, 72, who is also managing director ofHyparcons Pty Ltd which is a professional consultancy firm in Australia, will focus on issues concerning re-development and heritage at the forum. “I will also be studying the Penang Transport Master Plan (PTMP),” he told reporters.
The forum themed “Is the undersea tunnel environmentally sustainable and Gurney Drive enclave livable?” will be held at 8pm at E&O Hotel here.
Hyparcons provides services in disputes over development, land use planning, site appraisal and opportunities, land use controls and analysis, among others.
Dr Jensen said he only came to know of the proposed Penang undersea tunnel about 10 days ago, adding that “I am catching up with the progress of Penang since my last visit 40 years ago.”
Currently involved in urban designing and architecture in Australia, Dr Jensen has just finished writing a book which is scheduled to be published in June.
The undersea tunnel is one of the four infrastructure projects announ­ced by the state government.
The RM6.3bil mega package consists of the 6.5km Gurney Drive-Bagan Ajam undersea tunnel, the 4.2km Gurney Drive-Lebuhraya Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Bypass, the 4.6km Lebuhraya Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu-BandarBaru Air Itam Bypass and a 12km Tanjung Bungah-Teluk Bahang paired road. - The Star

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Mutiara Vista Wanted


Attention: Owners of Mutiara Vista,

For more information, please click the following link


Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Mutiara Vista Wanted

Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Palm Court (Pangsapuri Nipah) Wanted

Attention: Owners of Palm Court (Pangsapuri Nipah),

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Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Palm Court (Pangsapuri Nipah) Wanted

Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Vistaria Condo Wanted


Attention: Owners of Vistaria Condominium

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Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Vistaria Condo Wanted

Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Sunrise Garden Wanted

Attention: Owners of Sunrise Garden Condominium

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Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Sunrise Garden Wanted

Residents going to court to stop Penang high-rise project


GEORGE TOWN: A group of residents in Lengkok Moulmein in Pulau Tikus plans to take legal action against the Moulmein Rise project.
The residents and their supporters displayed banners with the words “Mai Moulmein” (meaning no to Moulmein' in Hokkien) outside some of their homes.
The Moulmein Rise project comprises a 27-storey commercial luxury development in a residential area.
The group's legal adviser Rowena Yam said Penang Municipal Council (MPPP) president Datuk Patahiyah Ismail had failed to address their concerns.
“I urge the council and caretaker state government to respond to us within five days, failing which, a judicial review would be sought,” Yam, who is also Pulau Tikus Barisan Nasional coordinator, told a press conference here yesterday.
On March 22, Patahiyah said the project would go ahead as MPPP had conducted the necessary surveys before approving it.
“More than 50% of the land there has been used for commercial purposes which is why we allowed the high-rise commercial development.
“Claims that we have approved it as a SoHo (small office, home office) development and hence the developer need not comply with open space and affordable housing requirements is untrue,” she told a press conference then.
Yam claimed that she could not purchase a copy of the approved building plan (from the MPPP) because the billboard on the project site does not have the plan's approval number.
“In the name of competency, accountability and transparency (CAT), the information must be made public,” she added.
A resident C.A. Foo, who has lived in the area for 35 years, said the council was “bulldozing its way through our objections”. - The Star

Saturday, April 13, 2013

E&O sells all 73 landed units of Villas By-The-Sea


GEORGE TOWN: Eastern & Oriental Bhd (E&O) has completely sold all the 73 landed properties in the RM260.6mil Villas By-The-Sea project.
The first batch of 40 two- to three-storey detached villas were sold and delivered to the purchasers in 2009, while the second batch of 33 units of three-storey detached and three-storey super-semi-detached villas were recently completed and delivered.
The project was a collaboration between E&O, CIMB-Mapletree Management Sdn Bhd (CIMB-Mapletree) and the Al Salam Bank of Bahrain, the parties who had signed an agreement in 2006 to jointly-develop the villas.
A private event was held in Penang to mark the culmination of this successful collaboration.
E&O was represented by deputy managing director Eric Chan Kok Leong, while the other two parties were represented by CIMB-Mapletreechief executive officer Raja Noorma Raja Othman and Al-Salam Bankchief executive officer Yousif Taqi.
Chan said in a press release that the group's aim was to fulfil lifestyle aspirations and was grateful to its partners CIMB-Mapletree and Al-Salam for their confidence and trust in E&O.
Raja Noorma Othman said the secret to a successful joint venture lay in the insightful selection of players who would bring together a unique congruence and synergy of shared objectives and complementary capabilities.
“Leveraging on CIMB-Mapletree's unrivalled network and reach, we were able to bring together two other highly respected entities in Al Salam Bank and E&O to strike a tripartite partnership that delivers an award-winning end-product with an innovative and cross-border structure. We aim to emulate similar successes for our subsequent funds,” she added.
Yousif, meanwhile, said the joint venture with E&O and CIMB-Mapletree had been a very fruitful one for all parties.
“We couldn't have asked for better partners to collaborate with in Malaysia. The trust in the partnership was apparent from the start and grew from strength to strength,” said Yousif.
The 73 villas enjoy an excellent location in the world-class master Seri Tanjung Pinang development, which is one of Penang's most sought-after residential enclaves, a preferred address among locals and home to more than 20 nationalities of foreigners. - The Star

Be realistic when buying your 1st house


A Cantonese phrase commonly heard and used by the community peng, leng, zheng literally means “cheap, beautiful and good” in English.
It is a catchy phrase that truly illustrates a purchaser's wish list when he or she is out shopping. But as most people find out very quickly, it is often unrealistic to expect to get all three in life.
In the context of buying a property, the equivalent mantra would be low price, landed and good location. These criteria are held dearly by young working adults when seeking their first home.
While it is ideal to want to own a home that ticks all the boxes, the execution part is in fact challenging if purchasers confine their selection to this formula.
Meeting one or two of these criteria is less daunting and more achievable. This observation holds water when one seeks to purchase a property in major cities.
Scarcity of land makes it not viable to build landed properties on prime areas and at the same time, market them at low prices.
So, what are the factors to consider when young working adults seek to buy their first home?
To understand the thoughts of a young working adult who is all eager to purchase a first home for himself or family, let us imagine being one of these purchasers.
It would not be difficult to realise that the first few thoughts that come to mind are the criteria mentioned earlier.
The important thoughts that come next are questions on how to get such a property and how to pay for it. This requires having a panoramic view of all the factors involved in purchasing a property and opening one's options.
Compared to purchasing a vehicle which costs less, has a shorter instalment period, does not require intensive research and mostly required for mobility, purchasing a property is one of the biggest and most difficult decisions encountered by the young working adults.
It involves searching hard for the right home, saving for the down payment before buying a home and subsequently, paying instalments for a longer period.
However, acquiring a property beats acquiring a vehicle hands down with appreciating value.
Saving to make a down payment for a property should start from early days of working life. If the savings are spent to buy a car first, the cost of owning a property will increase later due to inflation.
Apart from accumulating financial muscles, other chief considerations for buying a home are affordability, location, financial planning and desired lifestyle.
Affordability is the most fundamental consideration in acquiring the first property.
The monthly loan repayment must be within one's means without creating financial burden. It is common to see young working adults having preference for new property developments due to brand new designs and lower maintenance requirement.
However, second-hand properties will open up more choices as there are plenty of good deals at reasonable prices in the secondary market. Such properties can be converted into brand new homes after some renovations.
Closely tied to affordability is the location of the property. We normally seek housing hotspots near the city centre for own occupation or investment. Young working adults on the other hand, have tighter budgets and ought to expand the radar screen to include suburban areas.
There are many housing developments in the suburban areas which offer an ideal home environment at decent prices. Many of these developments have the potential to grow into thriving neighbourhoods with healthy population growth and proper infrastructure in place.
First home purchasers should also consider their overall financial planning. Buying a home is not the only commitment in life; the cost of living, other financial requirements such as family expenses and investment needs should be considered as well.
The ideal lifestyle is a subjective topic with different people having different preferences. Some will prefer a property that is self-contained or come with a wide range of facilities to meet their dynamic lifestyles. A high rise development would be a good option for them.
The ideal concept of “cheap, beautiful and good” in the context of buying a property especially in the major cities may be too good to be true.
There are always choices available for people buying a property if they are fully aware of all the factors involved in purchasing the property and are keen to explore more possibilities before taking the leap.
When you look out for property next time, and this peng, leng, zhengphrase crosses your mind, perhaps you should think twice and leave more options open.
FIABCI Asia-Pacific regional secretariat chairman Datuk Alan Tong has over 50 years of experience in property development. He is also the group chairman of Bukit Kiara Properties. For feedback, please emailfeedback@fiabci-asiapacific.com. - The Star