Absolutely, best is buying at 21.
Absolutely, best is buying at 21.
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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Step into PARKROYAL COLLECTION Marina Bay and the sustainability story is tangible before it is spoken. Daylight cuts through the re-opened atrium, planting stretches across bridges and walkways, and the hotel’s “garden in a hotel” concept turns biophilic design into everyday experience. At Pan Pacific Orchard, stacked greenery and sky terraces perform a similar role along a dense urban corridor.
These hotels sit at the heart of UOL Group Limited’s environmental agenda and explain why the company has been recognised as Best Sustainable Developer at the PropertyGuru Asia Property Awards (Singapore) 2025. They embody an approach built up quietly over decades, where climate-conscious design, adaptive reuse and greenery are woven into the core development logic rather than added as afterthoughts.
The group’s roots go back to 1963, when Singapore’s built environment was still finding its form. Over time, UOL developed a reputation for disciplined residential launches and a hospitality portfolio with a strong design identity. Yet its environmental approach evolved alongside these strengths. Rather than bolting sustainability onto completed projects, UOL gradually integrated climate-conscious design, adaptive reuse and biophilic principles into its core development logic. The result is a company whose sustainability identity has been shaped incrementally, project by project, decision by decision.
The past two years have drawn this into sharper focus. In 2024, UOL secured redevelopment approval for Faber House under the URA’s Strategic Development Initiative, signalling its alignment with Singapore’s next generation of low-carbon, future-ready precincts. Its asset-enhancement plans for Odeon reflected the same mindset: renewal over replacement, a stance gaining importance as the city begins to prioritise embodied carbon alongside operational efficiency.
Its hospitality portfolio has become the clearest expression of this philosophy. Pan Pacific Orchard, completed in 2022, introduced stacked greenery and sky terraces that act as climate buffers in a dense urban corridor. PARKROYAL COLLECTION Marina Bay emerged from a S$49 million transformation as a “garden in a hotel,” with daylighting, extensive planting and a reimagined atrium that brings natural ventilation and light into an older structure. These hotels show UOL’s sustainability not as a checklist but as something guests can see, feel and move through.
Residential developments follow a similar line. AMO Residence, nearly sold out on launch, and Avenue South Residence, completed in 2023 beside the Rail Corridor, blend shading, airflow and greenery into layouts designed for Singapore’s climate. Their success speaks to more than design appeal. It reflects a level of trust in UOL’s environmental and operational standards among buyers who increasingly look for long-term efficiency as part of quality.
UOL’s international work extends this philosophy to global markets. One Bishopsgate Plaza in London — the group’s first luxury mixed-use development in Europe — was delivered under the city’s stringent planning and environmental requirements, including energy and performance standards set out in the London Plan. UOL’s sustainability reports show that these environmental practices are applied consistently across its portfolio, rather than selectively depending on jurisdiction.
Momentum continued into 2025. UOL received the Singapore Corporate Sustainability Award (Big Cap Category) at the SIAS Investors’ Choice Awards, reflecting its transparency and ESG integration. It also won the Impact Enterprise Excellence Award at the Sustainability Impact Awards 2025, recognising measurable community and environmental outcomes. These distinctions arrived alongside a significant year-on-year rise in operating profit in the first half of 2025, demonstrating that sustainability and financial performance can reinforce rather than contradict one another. The awards matter less as decoration and more as independent validation of a direction the firm has pursued for years.
What differentiates UOL from other sustainably positioned developers is the way environmental thinking is tied to capital allocation, redevelopment strategy and long-term planning. The group often chooses to renew rather than demolish. It’s a significant shift in a city where replacement has historically been the default. As Singapore intensifies its focus on embodied carbon and low-carbon precincts, UOL’s redevelopment logic places it ahead of the regulatory curve.
Looking ahead, the group’s hospitality portfolio is likely to remain a platform for innovation, with future PARKROYAL COLLECTION enhancements expected to deepen its nature-led and climate-responsive design. Redevelopment projects such as Faber House and Odeon indicate an ongoing readiness to build within Singapore’s evolving sustainability framework rather than adapting reactively to it.
For UOL, the 2025 accolade is less a change of direction than a marker along a path it has followed for years. Environmental thinking is tied to capital allocation, redevelopment strategy and the way it refreshes existing assets. In a city tightening its focus on embodied carbon and low-carbon precincts, that kind of slow, structural work may prove to be the most important measure of sustainable development.

In a city where the property cycle is watched as closely as the weather, City Developments Limited has long been the quiet constant. Singapore’s market has moved through tightening rounds of cooling measures, fluctuating global sentiment and a reshaped demand curve.
Yet CDL has navigated it with a steadiness that has become something of a signature. Its Best Developer win at the PropertyGuru Asia Property Awards (Singapore) 2025 feels less like a crowning moment and more like an acknowledgement of that long-running discipline.
CDL’s story stretches back to 1963, before Singapore’s modern skyline began its rise. Six decades on, the group has grown into one of the country’s most influential developers, supported by a global network and more than 150 completed projects.
But size alone explains little. What has shaped CDL’s position is an ability to read the city’s rhythms, understanding when to build, when to replenish land, when to hold, and when to push ahead.
That judgment was on display through 2024. As buyers adjusted to new rules and developers weighed launch timing, CDL moved with a confidence grounded in data rather than impulse. Four launches totalling 1,502 units entered the market. By year’s end, 1,489 had sold, giving the group a 19% share of all new private home sales. It wasn’t a single breakout project that carried the year, but a balanced pipeline kept deliberately in phase with demand.
The picture has been similar in 2025. CDL reported S$1.7 billion in revenue in the first half of the year, supported by a 97% occupancy across its office and retail assets. It’s a solid showing in a period shaped by higher construction costs, tighter labour conditions and a more selective buyer pool.Strategic land wins at Lakeside Drive and the executive condominium plot at Woodlands Drive 17 point to the next phase of activity in emerging growth corridors, where infrastructure and planning investments are gathering pace.
Part of CDL’s distinction lies in its approach. Where some developers have chased scale through aggressive expansion, CDL has tended to advance through disciplined pacing like fine-tuning its launches, managing its land bank with care and building early governance frameworks that later became industry benchmarks. That strategy has helped the company hold its position in a crowded, fast-moving field.
Governance has long been one of CDL’s defining strengths. The group ranked second on the Singapore Governance and Transparency Index in 2024 and began 2025 on the Corporate Knights Global 100 list, placing 39th worldwide. This marked its 16th consecutive appearance and underlined a culture where transparency and oversight are treated as working tools, not slogans.
The same long-view thinking shapes its environmental agenda. CDL has now reported on sustainability for three decades. New programmes such as the EcoTrain and MicroForest build on earlier investments in green design and energy efficiency, pointing towards a more nature-led approach to placemaking that is starting to show through in its developments.
The company’s upcoming pipeline continues that evolution. Mixed-use projects such as Union Square Residences and Newport Residences indicate a growing emphasis on integrated environments, where housing sits alongside community infrastructure and commercial activation. They reflect a view of placemaking that looks beyond the project level to the wider life of each district.
This year’s Best Developer honour is less about a single set of results than the pattern behind them. Through cycles of expansion, consolidation and policy intervention, CDL has kept to a clear, long-term line: build carefully, allocate capital with discipline and let governance do some of the heavy lifting. In a landscape often defined by volatility, that quiet consistency has become one of Singapore real estate’s more reliable reference points.
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