GLENTREES Review

Condo Review 最終レビュー済み
District 10 ·999 yrs lease commencing from 1885 ·Completed 2005
~$1,956 Avg PSF (12-month)
2.7% Rental yield
176 Total units
Category Ratings
Facilities
6.0
Unit size & layout
6.5
Value for money
6.5
Neighbourhood
7.5
MRT accessibility
5.0
Lease remaining
10.0

Overview & Key Facts

Glentrees is a 176-unit freehold-equivalent condominium tucked into Mount Sinai Lane in District 10 — one of Singapore’s most established prime residential corridors. Developed by Leonie Court Pte Ltd, a subsidiary of CapitaLand Residential, and completed in 2005, the development sits on a 999-year lease commencing from 1885 — making it effectively freehold in every practical sense that matters to buyers, banks, and estate planners.

The Mount Sinai enclave is a quiet, leafy pocket sandwiched between Holland Road and the Portsdown/Wessex area. It is not a flashy address — you will not find it on the glossy brochures of luxury new launches — but it is the kind of neighbourhood that long-time D10 residents quietly recommend. The area is predominantly low-rise, with a mix of landed homes, older condominiums, and the Singapore Polytechnic campus forming a natural green buffer to the east.

At 176 units, Glentrees occupies a sweet spot: large enough to support a full suite of condo facilities, but small enough that residents know their neighbours and the grounds never feel overcrowded. CapitaLand’s involvement lends credibility to the build quality and management standards — a factor that matters more as developments age past the 20-year mark.

Developer
LEONIE COURT PTE LTD (CAPITALAND RESIDENTIAL)
Tenure
999 yrs lease commencing from 1885
Total units
176
TOP year
2005
District
10 — CCR
Street
MOUNT SINAI LANE
Lease remaining
~78 years (of 99)

Location & Connectivity

Location is where Glentrees delivers a mixed verdict. The Mount Sinai Lane address places you squarely in the heart of the Holland/Buona Vista education belt, surrounded by an extraordinary concentration of international and local schools. UWCSEA Dover Campus is 1.25 km away, Dover Court International School is 1.30 km, ACS (Independent) is 1.29 km, and Hwa Chong Institution sits at 1.51 km. Singapore Polytechnic, at just 0.96 km, anchors the eastern edge. For expat families with children in the international school circuit, this corridor is among the most convenient in Singapore.

The trade-off is MRT access. Dover MRT (East-West Line) is 0.82 km away — technically within walking range but uncomfortably so in Singapore’s heat and humidity, especially with young children. Buona Vista MRT interchange (East-West and Circle Lines) is 1.13 km, making it a bus or drive proposition. In practice, most Glentrees residents are car-dependent or rely on school buses for the children and ride-hailing for the adults.

For daily amenities, Holland Village is the natural gravitational centre — roughly 1.5 km away with its well-known mix of cafes, restaurants, supermarkets, and the Holland Village MRT station. The Star Vista mall at Buona Vista offers a Cold Storage, cinema, and dining options. For larger retail needs, the new Holland Village Extension (One Holland Village) adds premium retail and F&B.

MRT access caveat
At 0.82 km to Dover MRT, Glentrees falls outside the comfortable 500 m walking radius that most property analysts use as the threshold for “MRT-accessible.” Factor in grab/taxi costs or a car if public transit is your primary mode. The upcoming Thomson-East Coast Line station at Mount Sinai (Stage 5, expected 2032) may improve connectivity significantly.

For drivers, the AYE is easily accessible, and the CBD is approximately 15 minutes away during off-peak hours. Orchard Road is about 10 minutes by car. The one-north business park, home to a growing cluster of tech and media companies, is literally next door — a genuine advantage for professionals working in that precinct.


Schools & Education

Nearby Schools
SchoolTypeDistance
Singapore PolytechnictertiaryWithin 1 km
United World College of South East Asia (Dover)international~1.3 km
Anglo-Chinese School (Independent)secondary~1.3 km
Dover Court International Schoolinternational~1.3 km
Australian International Schoolinternational~1.4 km
Hwa Chong Institutionsecondary~1.5 km
Hwa Chong Institution (JC)jc~1.5 km
Hwa Chong International Schoolinternational~1.6 km

Facilities

As a 176-unit development from 2005, Glentrees offers a respectable but not extravagant facilities suite. The centrepiece is a well-maintained swimming pool with a surrounding deck area, complemented by a children’s wading pool. The gym is adequately equipped for daily workouts, though serious fitness enthusiasts will likely supplement with an external gym membership.

The development includes a tennis court — a genuine luxury for a sub-200-unit project, as many newer developments of similar size have dropped tennis in favour of more marketable lifestyle features. BBQ pits, a function room, a playground, and landscaped gardens round out the communal offerings. The grounds are well-maintained, with mature trees and landscaping that benefit from two decades of growth — something no new launch can replicate.

Security is managed through a 24-hour guardhouse and CCTV coverage. The relatively small unit count means the management can be more responsive to individual resident concerns — a practical advantage over mega-developments where getting a leaking ceiling addressed can involve weeks of committee process.

Facilities context
Glentrees is not a facilities-driven purchase. Buyers who prioritise resort-style amenities — infinity pools, sky gardens, co-working lounges — should look at newer launches like Leedon Green or One Holland Village Residences. What Glentrees offers instead is mature landscaping, low density, and a quiet compound that newer high-rise projects cannot match. The trade-off is intentional.

Unit Sizes & Layout

Glentrees comprises a mix of unit types across low- and mid-rise blocks, ranging from two-bedroom apartments to larger four-bedroom and penthouse configurations. The units reflect early-2000s design sensibilities: generally more generous floor plates than contemporary new launches, with proper enclosed kitchens, utility rooms, and balconies that serve as functional outdoor space rather than decorative ledges.

The larger units — three- and four-bedroom configurations — are where Glentrees shows its age most favourably. Floor areas that would be classified as “luxury” in a 2024 new launch were standard here in 2005. Families with children will appreciate the additional storage space, helper’s rooms, and full-sized kitchens that have largely disappeared from newer developments in the same price bracket.

Interior finishings are functional but dated by current standards. Most resale units will require renovation spend on bathrooms, kitchens, and flooring to bring them up to contemporary expectations. Budget S$80,000–$150,000 for a comprehensive refresh depending on unit size — a cost that should be factored into the total acquisition price when comparing against newer competitors.

Unit selection guidance
Units facing the Mount Sinai Lane frontage enjoy a quiet, landed-housing outlook with limited redevelopment risk. Higher-floor units in blocks oriented toward the Singapore Polytechnic side benefit from greenery views and cross-ventilation. Avoid lower-floor units facing internal access roads if noise sensitivity is a concern — while the development is quiet by city standards, ground-floor proximity to car parks and drop-off areas can be noticeable.
Unit Mix (from transaction data)
BedroomsTransactionsAvg PSFAvg Price
3 BR8$1,716$2,308,500
4 BR19$1,922$2,964,368
5 BR15$1,391$4,211,200

Pricing & Market Position

Based on 42 recorded transactions, sale prices range from $1,890,000 to $4,530,000, averaging $3,284,738 (~$1,956 psf).

Rents range from $3,500 to $12,800 per month across 200 rental transactions. Current rental yield sits at approximately 2.7%.


Price Appreciation

From 2021 to 2026, the average PSF has appreciated by 30.1% (from $1,523 to $1,981 psf).

2024
-7.9%
$1,619 psf
2025
+17.8%
$1,908 psf
2026
+3.8%
$1,981 psf

Neighbourhood Comparison

The competitive set for Glentrees is defined less by proximity and more by buyer intent. The direct comparisons break down along clear trade-off lines:

Leedon Green (S$2,784 psf, freehold, TOP 2023) offers brand-new finishings, modern facilities, and stronger investment appeal — but at a 40% PSF premium. Buyers choosing between the two are essentially deciding whether a fresh lease and new interiors justify paying S$800+ more per square foot. For own-stay buyers with renovation budgets, the math often favours Glentrees.

Hyll on Holland (S$2,648 psf, freehold, TOP 2024) is the other new freehold option in the corridor. It offers boutique scale (319 units) and contemporary design, but smaller unit sizes and a Holland Road address that trades quiet seclusion for urban convenience. The PSF gap is roughly 33%.

D’Leedon (S$1,854 psf, 99-year lease) is the closest PSF comparable but carries a standard 99-year lease against Glentrees’ 999-year tenure. D’Leedon offers scale (1,715 units), Farrer Road MRT proximity, and Zaha Hadid architecture — but the lease differential becomes increasingly meaningful over a 20+ year holding period.

Skye at Holland (S$2,945 psf) sits at the premium end, offering newer finishings and Holland Village lifestyle access. At nearly 50% above Glentrees’ PSF, it targets a different buyer segment entirely — affluent professionals prioritising location cachet over space and tenure.

Competitive positioning
Glentrees occupies a unique niche: effectively freehold tenure at resale pricing in a prime district. No current new launch in D10 can match this combination. The trade-off is age, finishings, and MRT access — factors that matter enormously to some buyers and barely at all to others. Know which camp you fall into before comparing PSF figures.
District 10 Comparables
DevelopmentTenureTOPUnits~Avg PSF
GLENTREES999 yrs lease commencing from 18852005176$1,956
SKYE AT HOLLAND99 yrs lease commencing from 20242025666$2,946
LEEDON GREENFreehold2021638$2,785
D'LEEDON99 yrs lease commencing from 201020141,703$1,858
HYLL ON HOLLANDFreehold2021319$2,648
FOURTH AVENUE RESIDENCES99 yrs lease commencing from 20182021476$2,465

Lease Decay Analysis

The 99-year lease runs from 2005, meaning approximately 21 years have already been consumed. Roughly 78 years remain — still comfortably within the range where most banks will offer full financing without restrictions.

Lease Milestones
YearLease remainingImplication
2026 (now)~78 yearsFull bank financing available
2035~69 yearsCPF usage still unrestricted for most buyers
2044~59 yearsApproaching 60-year threshold — CPF limits begin for some
2064~39 yearsSignificant financing restrictions for next buyer
2104ExpiryLease reverts to state

For a buyer purchasing today with a 10-year horizon (exit around 2036), the lease situation is essentially a non-issue — you’d be selling a property with ~68 years remaining, which is still very bankable. The risk profile changes for longer holds.


ShiokNest Scores

Our proprietary scoring system evaluates GLENTREES across multiple dimensions.

Walkability
65/100
MRT: 15/25, School: 20/20, Hawker: 10/15, Mall: 0/15, Park: 10/10, Supermarket: 10/10, Clinic: 0/5
Investment
66/100
+14.2% YoY ·2.4% yield ·9 txns/yr ·Unknown tenure ·0.82 km to MRT ·+22.6% district YoY ·En-bloc 53/100
Profitability
56/100
Win rate: 88 — 8 transaction pairs, 88% profitable, avg +$225,250
En-Bloc Potential
53/100
Verdict: Moderate
Overall ShiokNest Score
60/100 — composite of walkability, investment, profitability, en-bloc, and market trend factors.

What Residents Say

“We chose Glentrees primarily for the schools — UWCSEA Dover is a 5-minute drive and ACS Independent is just down the road. The 999-year lease was the clincher over newer 99-year options. The condo is quiet, well-maintained, and you actually know your neighbours.”

— Resident, expat family with two school-age children

“The MRT situation is the one thing I’d flag. We have two cars and it’s fine, but if you’re a single-car household with a working spouse who commutes by train, it adds friction. Dover MRT is walkable in theory but not in practice during the afternoon heat.”

— Long-term owner-occupier

“Compared to our previous place at D’Leedon, Glentrees feels more like a community. The smaller unit count means the pool is never crowded, you can always get a BBQ pit on weekends, and the management actually responds when you raise issues.”

— Resident who relocated from a neighbouring mega-development

The resident profile at Glentrees skews heavily toward families — both local and expatriate — with school-age children. The international school corridor creates a natural concentration of expat tenants, particularly those affiliated with UWCSEA and Dover Court. Owner-occupiers tend to be longer-term holders who bought for lifestyle rather than investment, which contributes to the stable, community-oriented atmosphere that residents consistently highlight.

Common praise centres on the quiet environment, mature landscaping, and manageable scale. Common criticisms focus on ageing finishings, the MRT distance, and the lack of modern lifestyle amenities that newer developments offer. The management corporation (MCST) has maintained the development to a reasonable standard, though some residents note that common area upgrades have been conservative compared to peer developments that have undergone more aggressive A&A works.


Strengths & Weaknesses

Strengths
  • 999-year lease from 1885 — effectively freehold, superior to all 99-year competitors
  • Prime District 10 address at S$1,985 psf — 30-50% below new-launch peers
  • International school corridor — UWCSEA, Dover Court, ACS Independent all within 1.3 km
  • CapitaLand-developed with established management standards
  • Low-density 176-unit compound — never crowded, community atmosphere
  • Generous unit sizes with proper kitchens, utility rooms, and functional balconies
  • Mature landscaping with 20 years of tree growth — impossible to replicate in new launches
  • Reliable expat rental demand driven by international school proximity
  • Tennis court retained — increasingly rare in sub-200-unit developments
  • Adjacent to one-north business park — short commute for tech/media professionals
Weaknesses
  • Dover MRT at 0.82 km — outside comfortable walking radius, car or bus needed
  • Buona Vista MRT interchange at 1.13 km — not a practical daily walk
  • Interior finishings dated after 20 years — budget S$80-150K renovation for resale units
  • Facilities adequate but not competitive with modern new launches
  • Thin transaction volume at 176 units — price discovery can be lumpy
  • No direct sheltered path to MRT — exposed walk in rain or heat
  • Common areas show age despite reasonable maintenance
  • Gross yield at 2.71% is modest by market standards
  • No co-working spaces, smart home features, or modern lifestyle amenities
Best for — Expat families (international schools) Multi-generational tenure holders Car-owning households One-north professionals Value-seeking D10 buyers Rental investors (school corridor) Renovation-ready buyers MRT-dependent commuters

Verdict

Glentrees is a fundamentally different proposition from the new launches it competes against on listing portals. At an average PSF of S$1,985, it trades at a meaningful discount to Leedon Green (S$2,784 psf, freehold), Hyll on Holland (S$2,648 psf, freehold), and even the older D’Leedon (S$1,854 psf) — while offering a 999-year lease that is functionally superior to all of them for multi-generational holding.

The value case is strongest for a specific buyer profile: expat families on international school runs who want D10 address prestige without D10 new-launch pricing, and who value space, quiet, and a mature estate over flashy facilities and MRT proximity. For this demographic, Glentrees is arguably under-priced relative to the neighbourhood utility it provides.

The risk factors are equally clear. The development is 20 years old and showing it in finishings and common areas. MRT access is genuinely inconvenient for non-drivers. The PSF trend — S$1,683 to S$1,757 to S$1,619 to S$1,908 to S$2,052 — shows healthy recovery but with volatility that reflects the thin transaction volume typical of smaller developments. At 176 units with limited turnover, price discovery can be lumpy.

For investors, the 2.71% gross yield is modest but typical for D10 freehold-equivalent assets. The rental pool is sustained by the international school corridor — UWCSEA and Dover Court families represent a reliable, recurring demand base that is less sensitive to economic cycles than corporate relocation tenants. The 999-year lease removes the lease-decay discount that erodes returns on 99-year properties after the 40-year mark.

Bottom line: Glentrees rewards patient, lifestyle-oriented buyers who understand what they are getting — and what they are not. It is not a capital-appreciation play or a spec buy. It is a solid, well-located, effectively freehold home in a prime district at a price point that newer competitors cannot touch.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Glentrees freehold or leasehold?
Glentrees holds a 999-year lease commencing from 1885, which is effectively freehold. With over 850 years remaining, this tenure carries no practical distinction from freehold for financing, valuation, or estate planning purposes.
How far is Glentrees from the nearest MRT station?
Dover MRT (East-West Line) is approximately 0.82 km away — technically walkable but uncomfortable in Singapore's climate. Buona Vista MRT interchange (East-West and Circle Lines) is 1.13 km. Most residents drive or take a short bus ride.
Which international schools are near Glentrees?
UWCSEA Dover Campus (1.25 km), Dover Court International School (1.30 km), and ACS (Independent) at 1.29 km are all nearby. Hwa Chong Institution is 1.51 km away. This concentration makes Glentrees one of the most school-convenient addresses in D10.
What is the average price and PSF at Glentrees?
Based on recent transactions, the average price is approximately S$3.26 million with a median of S$3.1 million. The average PSF is S$1,985, which represents a significant discount to newer D10 freehold competitors like Leedon Green (S$2,784 psf) and Hyll on Holland (S$2,648 psf).
Is Glentrees a good rental investment?
Glentrees yields approximately 2.71% gross, with an average rent of S$7,003/month across 199 rental transactions. The rental pool is sustained by the international school corridor, providing relatively stable demand from expat families — though the yield is modest by broader market standards.
How does Glentrees compare to D'Leedon and Leedon Green?
D'Leedon (S$1,854 psf) is cheaper but carries a 99-year lease vs Glentrees' 999-year tenure. Leedon Green (S$2,784 psf, freehold) offers new finishings and modern facilities at a 40% PSF premium. Glentrees sits between them — effectively freehold tenure at resale pricing, but with dated interiors requiring renovation.
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