Singaporeans remodel no-frills public flats as private housing costs up
Kamal, 40, and Sri, 40, pose with their children Ayumi, 14, Tiara, 13, and Kazril, 7, at a home library area inspired by Harry Potter movies, in their 37-year-old executive maisonette public housing apartment in Singapore, May 3, 2021. (Reuters Photo)


Singapore's public housing system is acclaimed for providing affordable homes in the land-scarce country where private apartments can cost upward of SG$1 million ($740,800).

The Housing Development Board (HDB) flats, in which 80% of Singapore's 5.5 million people live, are typically utilitarian with tight rules governing ownership and resales.

But inside the usually staid and uniform tower blocks, some homeowners have let their creative juices flow.

Melvyn Yap, a consultant, spent about SG$226,000 renovating the aging home he shares with his mother to create the vibe of a Japanese sake bar complete with a hydraulic table that opens up from a tatami mat-covered seating area where he can sip sake.

"If you get a place, with nice neighbors, renovate it nicely, stay in it, make it a home rather than thinking about making money," said Yap, who used to regularly travel to Japan before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Interior designer Wan Ismail Bin Wan Nussin, sits with his wife and children on bunk beds in their luxury yacht cabin-inspired three-room public housing apartment in Singapore, May 11, 2021. (Reuters Photo)

For decades, Singaporeans have used their HDB flats to make extra cash either by renting them out or reselling them at a profit.

Boating enthusiast Wan Ismail bin Wan Nussin was undeterred by the relatively small size of the 750-square-foot (69.7-square-meter) apartment, which he shares with his wife and four children.

He transformed the flat to resemble a luxury yacht cabin with wood-paneled walls and ceilings resembling decking.

"With the confined space in a vessel, a small area needs to have multiple uses, and that's how I applied the concept to a small shoebox apartment," said Ismail, an interior designer, whose children sleep on double-decker "berth" bunk beds.

Maheswari Balan has altered the HDB she shares with her husband into a post-apocalyptic doomsday bunker with concrete walls and floors and a weapons cabinet showcasing archery equipment.

"You want to come home to a place where you can be yourself, so just go creative, be yourself and go crazy with the house (design) you want," said Balan.

Alvin Goh Tien Sze, 42, a Chinese tea enthusiast, pours tea in his Chinese tea house-inspired five-room public housing apartment in Singapore, Sept. 3, 2021. (Reuters Photo)
A view of the public housing apartment estate where signmaker Ruvyn Tng and wife Phoebe live, in Singapore, Sept. 1, 2021. (Reuters Photo)
A view of a 37-year-old public housing apartment estate that Kamal and Sri live in, Singapore, May 3, 2021. (Reuters Photo)
Signmaker Ruvyn Tng, 31, and his wife, home baker Phoebe, 28, pose with their cats Kaala and Mocha in their cat cafe-inspired, 21-year-old resale four-room public housing apartment in Singapore, Aug. 30, 2021. (Reuters Photo)