Jump to content

Four contractors rescue five BTO projects after Greatearth went bust


Recommended Posts

Posted

Picture1.jpg.91557962f92c90b3f04d6aea740e2491.jpg

West Coast Parkview in Clementi is one of the five Build-To-Order housing projects that had been left in limbo after Greatearth Construction and Greatearth Corporation suddenly went bust.ST PHOTO: MARK CHEONG

 

SINGAPORE – Four construction firms will finish the five Build-To-Order (BTO) housing projects left in limbo after contractors Greatearth Construction and Greatearth Corporation suddenly went bust.

 

However, their completion will be further delayed by about two to three months.

 

According to straitstimes.com, this means buyers of the 2,982 affected units at the projects – Sky Vista @ Bukit Batok, Senja Heights and Senja Ridges in Bukit Panjang, Marsiling Grove in Woodlands, and West Coast Parkview in Clementi - can now expect to get their keys between the first quarter of 2022 and the third quarter of 2023, the Housing Board said on Wednesday (Sept 29).

 

The four contractors - Teambuild Engineering & Construction, Newcon Builders, Welltech Construction, and CES Engineering & Construction, a unit of Singapore-listed Chip Eng Seng Corp - were appointed on Tuesday, with building work at all five sites to progressively resume early next month.

 

Work slowdowns due to on-site safe management measures, acute worker shortages and disruptions to the materials supply chain have sent labour and building costs soaring.

 

This has raised the question of whether the four firms will get top-up payments to meet additional costs arising from risks not factored in the tenders awarded before the pandemic struck.

 

An HDB spokesman said: "The replacement contractors will be paid fair market value for the remaining works to be completed for the five projects. 

 

"Arising from the pandemic and measures related to it, construction costs have risen since the projects were tendered by Greatearth. Hence, some price adjustments will be needed to take this into account.

"The specific details of the agreements are confidential."

 

Chip Eng Seng told the Singapore Exchange on Wednesday night that the contract with the HDB to finish work on the Marsiling Grove project is "not expected to have any material impact on (its) net tangible assets and earnings per share for the current financial year ending Dec 31". 

 

Work at the five projects ground to a halt on Aug 20 after Greatearth told the HDB that it had run into financial difficulties and was unable to complete the projects despite government assistance. Two public projects could be held up as well. Several subcontractors are now staring at sizeable losses on unpaid fees by Greatearth.

 

HDB chief executive Tan Meng Dui said: "We recognise that the delays caused by Greatearth's exit will affect flat buyers and disrupt their life plans. We are also conscious that the construction industry is under severe strain, and the current situation brought about by the pandemic could not have been fully anticipated and is quite unprecedented.

"This is why we have worked with Greatearth and their liquidators... to source for several suitable contractors to take over the projects as quickly as possible," he said. 

 

This has enabled HDB to bring on board the four contractors within about a month, compared with the three to four months it would typically take to call a fresh tender for new contractors to take over the remaining work.

 

That has minimised delays to flat buyers, but completion will still be delayed by another two to three months due to the need for the replacement contractors to mobilise their resources.

 

 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...