
Most buyers looking at Bukit Timah today are asking the wrong question.
It's not "Is this a good project?"
It's "Am I entering too early... or too late?"
Because in today's market, the real decision is not just about choosing a new launch. It is about timing your entry into a location before the full story has been priced in.
And that is exactly where Dunearn House comes in.
Set within the evolving Bukit Timah-Turf City precinct, Dunearn House enters the market at a time when buyers are becoming far more selective. It is no longer enough for a project to be new, well-located, or nicely designed. Buyers today are asking tougher questions:
That is what makes Dunearn House interesting. It is not simply a project to evaluate in isolation. It is a timing decision.
Recent land tender activity has made that decision even sharper. The neighbouring Dunearn Road GLS site drew a top bid of about $533 million, translating to around $1,625 psf per plot ratio. This is meaningfully higher than the $1,410 psf per plot ratio paid for the earlier adjacent plot that is being developed into Dunearn House.
In simple terms, the market may already be telling buyers something important: the next chapter of Bukit Timah-Turf City is not being priced casually.
So the real question is not whether Bukit Timah is desirable. That part is not exactly a mystery.
The real question is whether this is the right time to enter its next growth chapter.
For many buyers, Bukit Timah has always carried a certain pull. It is established, recognisable, and closely associated with lifestyle, greenery, education, and private residential appeal.
But Dunearn House is not entering the old Bukit Timah story.
It is entering the next one.
That matters because the surrounding Turf City area is undergoing a major transformation. Over time, the precinct is expected to evolve from a largely low-density enclave into a new residential neighbourhood with future homes, amenities, connectivity, and green spaces.
For buyers, this creates a classic property dilemma: do you enter before the transformation becomes fully visible, or wait until the area feels more complete?
Both choices have logic.
Entering now may offer stronger early positioning, but it also means accepting that the precinct may not feel fully formed from day one.
Waiting may feel more comfortable, but that comfort could come with higher future benchmarks as more of the area takes shape.
This is where buyers need to be honest about their own strategy. Are you looking for immediate convenience, or are you comfortable entering earlier and letting the location mature around you?
That answer will determine whether Dunearn House makes sense.

The appeal of Turf City's transformation is not difficult to understand.
Singapore does not often get large, centrally located land parcels with the potential to be reshaped into new residential neighbourhoods. When such areas are planned and gradually activated, they can change how buyers perceive an entire location.
The scale of the transformation is significant. The wider Bukit Timah Turf City estate is expected to accommodate about 15,000 to 20,000 new homes across public and private housing over the coming decades. Instead of being treated as a small pocket of redevelopment, Turf City is being planned as a new residential precinct with its own identity.
That is the opportunity.
But opportunity should not be confused with instant perfection.
An evolving precinct comes with trade-offs. In the early years, buyers may have to deal with construction activity, developing amenities, and a neighbourhood that is still finding its rhythm. The full lifestyle ecosystem may not be immediately available.
There are future plans that could add character and convenience to the area, including community spaces, new amenities, green connections, and transport improvements. But not all of these will arrive at the same time, and some timelines may still evolve.
This is where some buyers may hesitate - and to be fair, that hesitation is not wrong.
That is why Dunearn House is not a one-size-fits-all decision. It suits buyers who can accept present-day incompleteness in exchange for longer-term positioning.
Here is where Dunearn House becomes more than just a "nice Bukit Timah project".
The site beside it has already provided a useful market signal.
The second Dunearn Road GLS site has now been awarded to a Wing Tai-Metro joint venture, following its top bid of $533 million, or about $1,625 psf ppr. The planned project is expected to yield around 330 residential units with ground-floor commercial space, adding another future benchmark beside Dunearn House. That land rate is around 15% above the $1,410 psf ppr paid for the earlier plot that will become Dunearn House.
That spread matters.
It suggests that developers were not simply bidding on today's Turf City. They were pricing in what the precinct could become.
For buyers, this creates a practical question: if the next land parcel has already been secured at a higher land cost, what might that mean for future launch prices in the same micro-location?
This does not mean Dunearn House is automatically "cheap". Buyers still need to assess layout, quantum, affordability, and personal objectives carefully.
But it does make the timing conversation more concrete.
Waiting may give you more visibility, but the next project could carry higher pricing pressure because of its land cost. Based on the top bid land rate, PropNex Research projects that the neighbouring project could potentially price above $3,000 psf at launch - a benchmark that would set a clear new ceiling for the precinct.
That is why Dunearn House may become the first real test of buyer appetite in this precinct.
It is not only testing whether buyers like Bukit Timah. It is testing whether buyers are prepared to enter Turf City before the full transformation is visible, but before future benchmarks potentially move higher.
The strongest way to understand Dunearn House is not to ask whether it is "good" or "bad". That is too simplistic.
A better question is this: what are you actually choosing if you enter now, compared with waiting?
You are choosing early positioning.
That means getting into the precinct before the area fully matures, before future amenities are completely realised, and potentially before future launches set new price references.
This can matter in a location like Bukit Timah, where available land is limited and demand has historically remained resilient due to its established reputation.
But there are risks.
The surrounding environment may take time to settle. Early buyers may not enjoy the full convenience of a mature precinct immediately. They may also need to tolerate construction and changing neighbourhood dynamics.
In simple terms, you gain potential, but you give up immediate completeness.
You are choosing certainty.
By waiting, you may get a clearer picture of how the precinct is shaping up. More amenities may be completed. Transport links, lifestyle offerings, and surrounding developments may feel more established.
But the cost of waiting is that future pricing may already reflect that improved certainty.
This is where many buyers misread the market. They assume waiting reduces risk. Sometimes, it does. But waiting can also introduce another kind of risk - the risk of being priced out, or entering later with less upside left on the table.
So the decision is not simply about risk versus safety. It is about which risk you are more comfortable taking.
Do you prefer the risk of entering early into an evolving area?
Or the risk of waiting until the story is clearer, but potentially more expensive?
That is the real Dunearn House decision.
Dunearn House is unlikely to be the kind of project that wins attention purely by being loud.
It does not need to.
Its positioning is more subtle: a recognised Bukit Timah address, an early foothold in the Turf City transformation, and a project profile that sits between boutique intimacy and full-scale residential offering.
The 99-year leasehold development is backed by a consortium comprising Frasers Property, Sekisui House, and CSC Land, and is expected to yield around 380 residential units on a site of approximately 145,173 sq ft. That scale is meaningful. It is large enough to offer a proper residential environment, but not so large that it automatically feels like a mega-development.
The developer track record also adds context. Frasers Property and Sekisui House were part of the consortium behind Seaside Residences, which saw strong launch demand and later reached full sell-out. Frasers Property and CSC Land also jointly developed Parc Greenwich, which saw 65% of units sold during launch, while CSC Land's Twin Vew recorded strong take-up during its launch weekend.
Of course, past projects do not guarantee Dunearn House's performance. But they do show that the consortium is not entering this project without experience in sizable, well-received residential launches.
Location-wise, the Dunearn Road stretch sits within the broader Bukit Timah school belt, close to established educational institutions and private residential estates. It is also positioned between existing transport nodes such as Sixth Avenue and King Albert Park, with future connectivity improvements expected to add another layer to the precinct over time.

The immediate 500m radius further reinforces this point. Nearby developments are largely freehold projects, with completion years ranging from the late 1980s to 2022. Together with existing resale and rental activity in the surrounding projects, this suggests that Dunearn House is not entering an untested micro-location.
At the same time, it brings a newer 99-year leasehold option into an established private residential pocket where many surrounding projects are older, boutique, or more limited in supply. The point is not to compare Dunearn House directly against every neighbouring project, since tenure, age, unit mix, and scale differ. Rather, it is to recognise that the project sits within a proven private residential environment while still being tied to the next phase of Turf City's transformation.
Dunearn House may make sense if you are the kind of buyer who values positioning over immediate perfection.
You are not just asking, "Is this place convenient now?" You are asking, "Where could this location be in five to ten years?"
You may want to consider Dunearn House if you:
In other words, this is for buyers who can see beyond the current snapshot.
But Dunearn House may not be the right fit if you:
This is important because not every opportunity is suitable for every buyer.
A strong location can still be a poor fit if the timing does not match your needs. And an early-stage precinct can still be attractive if you understand what you are entering into.
The key is not to chase the newest launch blindly. The key is to know what role this property plays in your overall plan.
If you are still unsure which direction makes sense for your own property journey, it may be worth taking a step back before making the next move. Should you enter early, wait for more certainty, restructure your current property first, or strengthen your affordability? These are questions that require more than market noise - they require a clear understanding of your own position.
For those who want to build that clarity, the Property Wealth System Masterclass offers a useful starting point to better understand property risks, opportunities, affordability, and long-term planning.
Because in a market where every move carries trade-offs, the goal is not simply to act. It is to act with direction.
No project enters the market with zero trade-offs.
The mistake buyers often make is searching for the perfect entry point: perfect location, perfect price, perfect timing, and perfect certainty.
But property rarely works that way.
By the time everything feels perfect, the market may already have priced in that comfort.
That is why Dunearn House should not be judged only by what the precinct looks like today. It should be assessed by what buyers believe the Bukit Timah-Turf City area can become, and whether they are prepared to enter before that story is fully completed.
The adjacent GLS result adds another layer to this decision. It suggests that developers are already attaching significant value to the precinct's future, even before the transformation is fully realised.
For some buyers, that may feel too early.
For others, that may be exactly the point.
Because in a transforming location, the biggest opportunity is rarely found when everyone already agrees. It is found when the trade-offs are still visible, the future is still unfolding, and the decision still requires conviction.
In today's market, the biggest risk is not necessarily choosing the wrong project.
It is making any decision - in either direction - without first understanding what you are actually choosing between.
Explore Your Options, Contact Us to Find Out More!
Selling your home can be a stressful and challenging process, which is why
it's essential to have a team of professionals on your side to help guide you through the journey. Our
team is dedicated to helping you achieve the best possible outcome when selling your home.
We have years of experience and a proven track record of successfully selling homes in a timely
and efficient manner.