Wartime is a good test of financial resilience. The notorious “Red Horse and Red Sheep Calamity” (赤马红羊劫) comes every 60 years. It is infamous to bring along fire, volatility, riots and warfare. Coincidentally, it falls in the years 2026 and 2027. While we were still celebrating Chinese New Year, the United States and Israel couldn’t… [read more]
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On a quiet stretch of University Road in District 11, three detached homes sit on elevated terrain, their forms stepping with the slope rather than fighting it. Terraces, voids and openings choreograph how light and breeze move through each house, and the architecture feels tailored to the site rather than imposed upon it.
This kind of specificity has become increasingly rare in Singapore’s landed segment. With supply constrained, planning rules tightening and few new plots entering the market, the craft of designing and building houses at this level of care stands out. It is in this context that Jean Yip Developments has been recognised as Best Landed Developer at the PropertyGuru Asia Property Awards (Singapore) 2025.
Founded in 2002, the company has completed 16 landed projects, a compact but telling body of work, more than half delivered in the past five years. It operates quietly, with a design-led approach that treats every home as a bespoke response to its site.
Landed development requires an unusual combination of sensitivity and precision: understanding street character, setbacks, sightlines, gradients, vegetation and how the sun shifts across low-rise neighbourhoods through the day. Jean Yip Developments works comfortably within these parameters, producing houses that feel considered rather than imposing.
Its recent University Road project in District 11 illustrates this craft. The three detached homes sit on elevated terrain, a condition that can easily overwhelm a design if handled without care. Instead of forcing symmetry onto the slope, the architecture steps naturally with the land. Terraces, voids and openings choreograph how light and breeze move through each home. Internal circulation unfolds gradually, shaped by light wells and side courtyards that create moments of calm. The result is a trio of houses that feel individually tailored yet quietly connected by proportion and materiality.
Other projects show the same design discipline expressed in different contexts. At 8 Dyson, three bungalows adopt crisp modern lines tempered by greenery and controlled frontage, responding to the prestige and privacy expectations of the area. Along Shelford Road, two bungalows achieve openness without exposing residents to the street, using landscape buffers to soften boundaries.
At Chancery Road, a five-home cluster demonstrates how individuality can be preserved even within a coordinated framework, with each house expressed through subtle shifts in form and orientation. Across these developments, refinement lies in architectural judgement rather than showiness.
What sets Jean Yip Developments apart is its understanding of landed buyer psychology. These are homeowners seeking permanence — families who expect a house to hold its character for decades rather than cycles. They look for proportion, material integrity and comfort, not visual excess. The company’s homes are planned with these needs in mind: long sightlines that bring light deep into the plan, circulation that feels intuitive, upstairs spaces that balance privacy with openness, and materials chosen to age well. Landscaping is treated as a structural element that shapes the microclimate of each plot, not an afterthought.
The developer also reads the streetscapes of landed neighbourhoods with care. In areas where context matters — whether a quiet cul-de-sac, a sloped ridge, or a transitional fringe near a major road — the company’s designs show an understanding of how to sit comfortably within the existing fabric. Massing is moderated to avoid overpowering neighbours, and architectural language is calibrated to the character of each precinct. This neighbourhood sensitivity has become a defining part of its reputation.
Beyond Singapore, the company has selectively extended its craftsmanship overseas. In Japan, its portfolio of Airbnb properties applies the same small-scale spatial intelligence in a hospitality context. In Australia, its first project — a 117-unit development in Perth — won multiple awards, showing that its attention to proportion and detailing holds up under international scrutiny. These ventures remain measured, reflecting a commitment to quality rather than growth for its own sake.
Demand for landed homes is rising, shaped by multi-generational living, shifting notions of privacy and the desire for individuality in a dense city. With limited new supply and rising expectations for architectural quality, the segment demands a developer who can work with precision and empathy. Jean Yip Developments has shown a consistent ability to deliver homes that respond to both the practicalities of construction and the nuances of domestic life.
The Best Landed Developer award is, in effect, an endorsement of this rare craft. In a city shaped by vertical growth, Jean Yip Developments builds houses that retain the intimacy of home – spaces defined by proportion, light and thoughtful detail. In doing so, it has carved out a clear identity in one of Singapore’s most exclusive and challenging segments.
Best Transnational Developer: IOI Properties Group
When IOI Central Boulevard Towers reached its final Temporary Occupation Permit in December 2024, it did more than add a new profile to Singapore’s CBD skyline. Leasing momentum into 2025 pushed committed occupancy towards 75% early in the year and sent a signal about demand for Grade A office space in a cautious market.
For IOI Properties Group, it was a defining moment: proof that a Malaysia-born developer could deliver at the top end of an international investment market. Its Best Transnational Developer win at the PropertyGuru Asia Property Awards (Singapore) 2025 recognises the broader pattern behind that project. It’s a company that has learned to move across borders without losing its footing.
IOI’s roots lie in township development in Malaysia, where the group established its reputation through large-scale, long-horizon projects. Since its founding in 1975, the company has completed more than 100 developments and built out a portfolio spanning retail, hospitality, industrial assets and mixed-use precincts.
Yet its evolution into a regional player has been defined less by expansion for its own sake than by understanding what each market needs and where IOI can make the most impact.
Navigating three economies moving at different speeds is not straightforward. Singapore’s property market remains tightly regulated; Malaysia is in a period of renewed retail and tourism momentum; China is recalibrating its real estate landscape. Currency movements, construction inflation and shifting post-pandemic demand have made regional planning more intricate. The fact that IOI has gained ground across all three contexts speaks to a development model built on long-term planning rather than short-cycle bets.
Across the border, IOI continued consolidating its position in Malaysia. The acquisition of Tropicana Gardens Mall in Petaling Jaya strengthened its retail platform, while its hospitality portfolio expanded with W Kuala Lumpur, Courtyard by Marriott Penang and the soft opening of Moxy Putrajaya — the brand’s Malaysian debut. These moves coincided with a broader uptick in domestic and regional travel, giving the group strong operational momentum.
IOI also made a decisive push into the industrial sector in 2024 with the launch of the IOI Industrial Park series in Banting and Iskandar Malaysia, alongside plans for Melaka. Industrial real estate has become one of Southeast Asia’s more resilient asset classes, and IOI’s shift reflects a clear reading of demand patterns shaped by logistics growth, supply chain restructuring and manufacturing investment.
Further afield, IOI Business Park in Xiamen completed in 2024 and reached full occupancy shortly after. In a market where office absorption has varied across cities, the development’s 100% tenancy stands out. It has begun contributing steady recurring income, giving the group a stable foothold in one of China’s important coastal hubs.
IOI’s distinction as a transnational developer lies less in the number of markets it is in than in the way it adapts its portfolio to each one. In Singapore, the focus is on investment-grade commercial assets. In Malaysia, the group leans into its strengths in townships, retail, hospitality and industrial platforms. In China, it has chosen targeted commercial assets that build long-term income. Few regional developers maintain this level of coherence; IOI’s cross-border moves feel intentional rather than opportunistic.
This approach demands disciplined risk management. Operating across borders requires staging capital through different cycles, managing regulatory divergence and maintaining organisational clarity across multiple asset classes. IOI’s ability to hold a long view through each of these challenges has shaped its growth as much as any completed development.
Sustainability continues to move through its portfolio. The group is integrating energy-efficient design and environmental performance standards across its developments, particularly in asset classes where international operators and corporate tenants expect measurable ESG progress. It’s a steady, infrastructure-led approach rather than a headline-driven one, aligned with the needs of its regional footprint.
Looking ahead, IOI’s regional identity is set to deepen. ICBT will anchor its Singapore presence, hospitality and industrial growth will drive its next phase in Malaysia, and commercial assets in Xiamen lay the groundwork for a long-term China strategy. What connects these moves is not scale alone, but a consistent understanding of how each market works — and how best to build within it.
In a region where volatility often sets the pace, IOI’s strength lies in matching each market’s tone while keeping a steady line of its own. That combination of reach and restraint is what now defines the group’s presence across Singapore, Malaysia and China, and what the Best Transnational Developer accolade formally brings into focus.
Best Lifestyle Developer: Frasers Property Singapore
Lifestyle has become one of the most overused words in Singapore’s property market. Too often it stands in for marketing gloss or amenity lists rather than any meaningful idea of how people actually live. Frasers Property Singapore has taken a different path.
Its recent portfolio is small but confident, shaped by greenery, heritage and a sensitivity to the rhythms of daily life. Its Best Lifestyle Developer win at the PropertyGuru Asia Property Awards (Singapore) 2025 reflects a clear understanding that lifestyle is an experience built through design.
Though established in its current form only in 2018, Frasers Property Singapore inherits a longer placemaking lineage from the wider group. What distinguishes the Singapore arm is its focus on measured, human-scaled environments: projects designed around walkability, natural ventilation, planting and community spaces. With four completed developments since 2020, it does not compete on volume. Instead, it concentrates on the architecture of everyday life — the transitions between street and home, the pocket spaces where people gather, the way greenery softens height and creates comfort in a compact city.
Sky Eden @ Bedok, the fully sold mixed-use development that recently obtained TOP, is perhaps the clearest statement of intent. With sky gardens running along every level, the development treats biodiversity and vertical greenery not as embellishment but as part of the building’s structure. Communal decks link neighbours through planted corridors, while the ground plane folds naturally into Bedok’s existing heartland fabric. It is a lifestyle concept rooted in ecology, shade, airflow and community rather than large gestures.
Two launches in 2025 — The Orie and The Robertson Opus — continued this direction in different settings. The Orie, a BCA Green Mark Platinum Super Low Energy project, uses layered greenery and thoughtful zoning to create a sense of calm within a tight urban footprint. The Robertson Opus takes a similar approach within a riverfront district, using biophilic design to introduce pockets of quiet into a neighbourhood better known for its dining and nightlife. Together, they demonstrate a shift away from amenity-driven lifestyle offerings towards developments designed to support well-being, privacy and connection.
Lifestyle, for Frasers, extends beyond residential towers. The asset enhancement of Tampines 1 in 2024 brought approximately 200 new and refreshed retail offerings into a maturing suburban hub. More than a commercial refresh, the project introduced sustainability-driven upgrades — solar installations, energy-efficient lighting and water-saving features — while becoming part of Singapore’s first brownfield distributed district cooling network. The result is an improved microclimate and a more comfortable public realm. It is lifestyle delivered through climate-responsive design and better everyday experiences rather than short-lived novelty.
Heritage has also become a subtle but significant part of the company’s placemaking language. The conservation of the three former Jiak Kim Street warehouses, recognised with URA’s Architectural Heritage Award in 2024, transformed the structures into anchors of a modern riverside precinct. As part of the Rivière development and Fraser Residence River Promenade, they frame a new public realm that blends memory and modernity. In a city where redevelopment often erases what came before, this is a reminder that lifestyle is also shaped by history and continuity.
Across these projects, a unifying idea emerges. Frasers Property Singapore designs micro-environments: small, intentional “urban rooms” where greenery, circulation and community overlap. Its developments consider how residents move through space: shaded walkways that stay cool in the afternoon, planted terraces that double as neighbourhood meeting points, riverfront edges that feel open rather than exclusive. These are not dramatic architectural statements; they are choices that influence comfort, belonging and well-being.
This is what sets Frasers apart in a competitive category. Where lifestyle is often communicated through branding and imagery, Frasers expresses it through how space feels underfoot. Its projects place nature and walkability ahead of spectacle, and renewal ahead of reinvention. Even its sustainability strategies — nature-positive design, biophilic planning, solar-integrated upgrades — serve the lifestyle experience rather than sit beside it as separate initiatives.
Looking ahead, this direction seems well aligned with Singapore’s broader shift towards climate-responsive, people-centred development. Sky Eden will set a new benchmark for vertical greenery when it completes in 2025, while further retail enhancements and heritage-led placemaking will continue shaping neighbourhoods in ways that feel grounded rather than imposed. In a city increasingly shaped by heat, density and urban growth, Frasers’ approach offers a reminder that lifestyle is ultimately built through the quality of everyday moments.
In a city increasingly shaped by heat, density and urban growth, Frasers’ approach is a reminder that lifestyle is built in the small, repeated moments of daily life — the cooled walkway, the planted terrace, the familiar streetscape — not only in the headline features of a launch.