Flexi layouts were first seen in Skyville@Dawson, whose residents began collecting their keys two years ago (2015).PHOTO: HDB

 

At Woodleigh Glen, a Build-to-Order project in Bidadari ready in 2021, all 1,000 units will have their structural beams and columns tucked to the edges, so that residents can reconfigure the internal space according to their needs.

For instance, homeowners can start off with layout that gives them a larger bedroom or living room. If they need to partition off another room in the future, they can erect a wall.

Such flexi layouts were first seen in Skyville@Dawson, whose residents began collecting their keys in 2015.

But they could soon be standard fare, with the HDB pledging to apply "urban design solutions that are found to be technically feasible, cost-effective and well-accepted by residents" to other housing precincts, the agency said in a statement on Sunday (Sept 3).

But they could soon be standard fare, with the HDB pledging to apply "urban design solutions that are found to be technically feasible, cost-effective and well-accepted by residents" to other housing precincts, the agency said in a statement on Sunday (Sept 3).

The feature is one of many that has helped Woodleigh Glen clinch the Innovative Design Award in the "to-build" category of the HDB's annual HDB Design Awards.

The project was planned and designed entirely by HDB's in-house team of planners, architects and engineers in the Building and Research Institute. Typically, the HDB ties up with developers and architects to design new homes.

Housewife Estee Chan, 44, said the flexi layout was what drew her to her four-room Skyville@Dawson unit in the first place: "Although we did not change any of the wall placements, I did not regret our choice after seeing some of my friends' homes with unsightly corners and niches."

 

This article was originally published on The Straits Times.