Queenstown earliest neighbourhoods

Queen's Close and Queen's Crescent flats were built in 1961. It was the fifth neighbourhood to be built at Queenstown. These flats were of H-shaped design with 7 storeys tall. However, these flats were left standing for around 30 years before they were demolished in the 1990s to build more new houses due to redevelopment plans.
Queen's Crescent flats under construction

Queenstown Neighbourhood V at Quuen's Crescent

HDB terrace houses at Queen's Crescent


The completed H-shaped 7-storey blocks at Queen's Crescent



The earliest flats at Queenstown were built in Princess Estate in Strathmore and Dawson Road in the 1950s when HDB's predecessor, the Singapore Improvement Trust (SIT) flats were located. After HDB took over the construction of public housing flats, 3 blocks in Stirling Road at Block 45, 48 and 49 were built in 1960. In the next 5 years, new flats at Tanglin Halt, Commonwealth and Queen's Close were completed.



An aerial view of Clarence Lane in Queenstown

Clarence Lane Estate 9-storey 3-room flats, 1961

Tanglin Halt Estate is the fourth neighborhood built at Queenstown in 1962. As the flats are majority rows of 10-storey buildings, the estate is also known as Chap Lau Chu(十楼厝) in Hokkien. Like most old HDB flats of the 1960s, the estate has been selected under SERS en-bloc scheme and will be scheduled for demolition and redevelopment by 2020.

The first 9 blocks of 10-storey flats at Block 24-32 Tanglin Halt Road, 1961
The remaining completed Tanglin Halt flats, 1962

To look at the development of Queenstown, click on the following links below:

Comments

  1. Hi! These photos are beautiful and I'd like to seek your permission to use them in a project. I couldn't find your contact details though, hence leaving a comment here. Could you please contact me? Thanks very much!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Outram Park Complex

Toa Payoh in the 1960s

5-room flats in the 1970s