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#120 Reality vs Reputation: Is the Housing Development Board Losing Its Way? 建屋发展局是否正在迷失方向?

Reality vs Reputation: Is the Housing Development Board Losing Its Way?

Singapore’s Housing & Development Board (HDB) was once a global benchmark for public housing excellence.

It built a nation.

It housed over 80% of the population.

It engineered social cohesion through town planning that the world studied.

And at its symbolic peak stood The Pinnacle@Duxton — a project that made international headlines and was featured by global media including outlets such as BBC and CNN as a case study of how public housing could rival private condominiums.

The Pinnacle@Duxton was intended to be a proud showcase for Singapore public housing but its existence marked the start of million-dollar public housing that has since spread island-wide. (Photo source: BBC Year 2012)

But today, something feels different.


From Global Showcase to Million-Dollar HDB Flats

When The Pinnacle@Duxton was launched, it symbolised aspiration. Sky gardens. Iconic architecture. Central Business District proximity.

Today, million-dollar HDB transactions are no longer rare — not just at Duxton, but across mature estates and even heartlands.

Recent headlines have documented:

  • Million-dollar resale flats in Toa Payoh
  • Five-room flats crossing $1M in Queenstown
  • Executive flats and maisonettes hitting record highs in Bishan
  • Yishun and other far-flung estates approaching unprecedented price levels

In fact, Yishun — once perceived as peripheral — has seen resale flats breach record territory, reflecting a broader inflationary trend across public housing.

Public housing was designed for affordability and accessibility.

When multi-million-dollar flats become normalised, we must ask:

Is HDB still serving its foundational mandate?


Prime & Plus: Policy Innovation or Market Misread?

Under former National Development Minister Desmond Lee, HDB introduced the Prime and Plus categories — an attempt to recalibrate subsidies and impose tighter resale conditions for centrally located flats.

On paper, the reforms aimed to:

  • Preserve affordability
  • Prevent windfall gains
  • Introduce longer Minimum Occupation Periods (MOP)
  • Claw back subsidies upon resale

However, recent BTO exercises revealed subscription rates under 1.0 in certain projects — meaning supply exceeded demand.

The narrative presented publicly?

“All first-timers secured their choice units.”

Technically accurate.

But does that reflect strong demand — or weakening confidence?

If Prime and Plus flats were truly attractive propositions, why would subscription ratios fall below equilibrium levels?

Burgers are shrinking just like apartments but at least the price stays. Final match score? McDonald’s 1 – 0 HDB.

Leadership Transition — And Service Deterioration?

Since Chee Hong Tat took helm of the Ministry of National Development portfolio, concerns appear to be mounting — particularly around service standards.

As of 1 March 2026, HDB’s general hotline (6490-1111) has been discontinued.

Customers are now directed to:

  • HDB e-Services
  • Dedicated branch hotlines
  • Online channels

In theory, digitisation improves efficiency.

In practice?

Readers report:

  • Calling HDB 20 times after receiving a missed call — with no response
  • Being told walk-in enquiries are not accepted without prior appointment
  • Counter staff refusing service without digital booking

Imagine a public agency that:

  • Reduces phone accessibility
  • Restricts physical walk-ins
  • Channels enquiries selectively online

Digital transformation should increase access — not narrow it.


When Process Overrides Compassion

More troubling are the procedural rigidity cases emerging:

• A bed-ridden elderly mother reportedly required to appear physically at HDB to give consent.

• A divorced parent with shared care and control (court-ordered) told the ex-spouse must be physically present to consent before purchase of a flat.

• A staff allegedly saying to a reader: “Can you don’t inform Ministry of Law?”

If accurate, these accounts raise uncomfortable questions:

  • Does HDB override court orders?
  • Does it impose internal policy above judicial rulings?
  • Is discretion being exercised — or avoided?

We are living in a digital age of Singpass authentication, video verification, and e-consent frameworks.

Why insist on rigid manual appearances in exceptional hardship cases?

Maybe magic from medieval times would work better for a bed-ridden grandmother to grant consent to the gods in Housing Development Board (HDB) since digitalization and virtual meetings do not work in modern Singapore.

A Wider Pattern?

The trajectory appears paradoxical:

  • Million-dollar resale flats proliferate
  • Prime/Plus projects under-subscribe
  • Hotline discontinued
  • Walk-ins restricted
  • Procedural rigidity increases

Meanwhile, response times reportedly decline.

The agency that once built towns with community as its backbone now risks becoming administratively distant.


The Pinnacle Paradox

The Pinnacle@Duxton was meant to demonstrate that public housing could achieve excellence without sacrificing inclusivity.

Instead, it may have unintentionally normalised the idea that public housing can — and should — command private market premiums.

When public housing becomes an asset class first and a social stabiliser second, distortions follow.


The Question That Matters

HDB is not just a statutory board.

It is the backbone of Singapore’s social contract.

If confidence erodes — not because of architecture, but because of:

  • Access
  • Fairness
  • Responsiveness
  • Compassion

Then the issue is no longer housing supply.

It becomes governance quality.


Singapore’s public housing miracle was built on:

Pragmatism. Accessibility. Rule of law. Administrative excellence.

If citizens now feel unheard, unseen, or procedurally cornered, then reform is not optional — it is urgent.

The world once studied HDB as a model.

The question today is:

Will Singapore study it again — this time as a cautionary tale?


If you have experienced challenges with HDB — particularly regarding Prime/Plus schemes, consent procedures, or accessibility — I welcome constructive dialogue.

Public institutions improve not through silence, but through scrutiny.

This article is also published on LinkedIn.


现实与声誉:建屋发展局是否正在迷失方向?

新加坡的 Housing & Development Board(建屋发展局,HDB)曾经是全球公共住房的典范。

它建设了一个国家。 它安置了超过80%的人口。 它通过精密的城镇规划塑造了社会凝聚力,成为世界研究的样本。

而在象征性的巅峰之作——The Pinnacle@Duxton——更是登上国际媒体版面,被 BBC、CNN 等全球媒体报道,誉为“媲美私人公寓的公共住房典范”。

然而今天,情况似乎正在发生变化。


从全球标杆到百万新元组屋

当 Pinnacle@Duxton 落成时,它象征着一种理想—— 空中花园、地标式建筑设计、紧邻中央商业区。

如今,百万新元组屋交易已不再罕见——不仅在市中心的 Duxton,在成熟组屋区,甚至远至心脏地带也频频出现。

媒体近期报道显示:

  • 大巴窑百万组屋成交
  • 女皇镇五房式突破百万
  • 碧山公寓式组屋创纪录
  • 远至 Yishun 亦出现高价成交

公共住房原本的核心使命,是“可负担”与“可及性”。

当“百万组屋”成为常态,我们必须问:

建屋发展局是否仍然忠于其创立初心?


Prime 与 Plus:政策创新还是市场误判?

在前国家发展部长 Desmond Lee 任内,HDB 推出了 Prime 与 Plus 分类制度,试图通过:

  • 延长最低居住年限(MOP)
  • 加强补贴回收机制
  • 限制转售条件

来抑制“风fall收益”,维持公平性。

政策初衷值得肯定。

然而,近期部分项目出现 认购率低于1.0 的情况——即供应多于需求。

官方的叙述是:

“所有首次购房者都获得了心仪单位。”

这在技术上无误。

但问题是:

这反映的是成功,还是市场信心下降?

若 Prime 与 Plus 真具吸引力,为何需求未达预期?


领导更迭与服务质量下降?

自 Chee Hong Tat 接掌相关发展事务后,公众对服务标准的质疑似乎增加。

2026年3月1日起,HDB 总热线(6490-1111)正式取消。

公众被引导至:

  • HDB 电子服务
  • 各分行专线
  • 在线渠道

理论上,数字化应提高效率。

现实中,读者反映:

  • 接到HDB来电后回拨20次无人接听
  • 无预约不得现场咨询
  • 柜台拒绝无预约办理

一个公共机构:

  • 取消总热线
  • 限制现场接待
  • 主要通过线上筛选

这真的是“数字转型”吗?

还是“降低可达性”?


当程序凌驾于人性

更令人担忧的是以下个案:

  • 一位卧病在床的母亲被要求亲自到场签署同意
  • 一名拥有法院判定“共同监护及共同照料”的家长,被要求前配偶必须到场同意
  • 有工作人员对读者表示:“你可以不要通知律政部吗?”

如果属实,这些情况引发严肃问题:

  • HDB 是否凌驾于法院裁决之上?
  • 内部政策是否优先于法律精神?
  • 是否缺乏酌情权与人性化判断?

在 Singpass 电子验证、视频认证、电子签署广泛应用的时代,

为何仍坚持僵化的线下亲自到场程序?


更大的结构性问题?

目前呈现出一个矛盾现象:

  • 百万组屋普遍化
  • Prime/Plus 项目认购不足
  • 热线取消
  • 现场咨询限制
  • 回应效率下降

曾经以“以民为本”著称的建屋发展局,

是否正变得行政化、机械化?


Pinnacle 的悖论

Pinnacle@Duxton 原本是向世界展示:

公共住房也可以卓越。

但如今,它似乎成为“资产化公共住房”的象征。

当公共住房从“社会稳定器”转向“资产投资工具”,

结构性扭曲便难以避免。


真正需要思考的问题

建屋发展局不仅是一个法定机构。

它是新加坡社会契约的核心。

如果民众对它的信心因以下因素动摇:

  • 可达性
  • 公平性
  • 回应效率
  • 人性化处理

那么问题已不只是“供应量”。

而是“治理质量”。


新加坡公共住房的成功建立在:

务实。 可及。 法治。 高效行政。

若民众开始感到:

听不到回应、 得不到协助、 被程序压迫、 被制度忽视,

那么改革已不再是选择,而是必须。

世界曾研究 HDB 作为成功典范。

今天的问题是:

未来是否会有人将其研究为一个反面教材?


如果你在 Prime/Plus 机制、组屋审批流程、或与 HDB 沟通中遇到困难,欢迎理性交流。

公共制度的进步,不来自沉默,而来自监督与讨论。

此刊文也发布在领英社交媒体,LinkedIn.

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