16 @ Amber
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Overview & Key Facts
16 @ Amber is a quiet boutique condominium of just 40 units along the storied Amber Road corridor in District 15 — a stretch of Katong that has quietly become one of Singapore’s most sought-after addresses for discerning homeowners who want the East Coast lifestyle without the footprint of a mega-development. Developed by Novelty Amber Pte Ltd and completed in 2013, the project occupies a compact but well-proportioned site that delivers privacy and low density in an area where both are increasingly rare commodities.
At 40 units, 16 @ Amber sits firmly in the boutique tier — a category that trades swimming pools shared with strangers and committees of hundreds for the quieter rhythms of a small-community building. The development launched under a 99-year leasehold tenure, which at 86 years remaining as of 2026 still offers comfortable financing headroom, though buyers thinking two decades ahead will want to be aware of the clock.
The surrounding neighbourhood tells a more compelling story than the building itself. Amber Road is flanked by Peranakan shophouses, independent cafés, and the kind of unhurried street life that is hard to replicate. The East Coast Park runs barely five minutes’ walk to the south, the new Tanjong Katong and Marine Parade Thomson–East Coast Line stations have materially improved connectivity since 2024, and the concentration of reputable primary schools within 1 km makes the address a perennial favourite for families hunting the Phase 2 ballot proximity advantage.
Location & Connectivity
The opening of the Thomson–East Coast Line (TEL) transformed the connectivity calculus for the entire Amber Road precinct. Tanjong Katong MRT (TE25) sits roughly 740 metres from 16 @ Amber, a walk that crosses Tanjong Katong Road and takes around nine minutes in ordinary conditions. Marine Parade MRT (TE26) is slightly further at 850 metres in the opposite direction. Neither is a stroll you would do twice daily in the afternoon heat without thinking about it, but bus services along Amber Road and East Coast Road provide a reliable supplementary option.
For drivers, Amber Road offers quick access to the East Coast Parkway (ECP), which connects to the CBD in around 12–15 minutes off-peak. Changi Airport is roughly 20 minutes away, a point that matters more to this address’s demographic than it does for developments on the west side of the island. The Paya Lebar sub-regional centre is under 10 minutes by car, giving working professionals a secondary CBD option that requires no expressway time at all.
Walkable amenities are genuinely good for a non-integrated development. Parkway Parade shopping mall is within comfortable walking distance, covering everyday groceries, dining, a cinema, and a Cold Storage supermarket. The Katong and East Coast Road dining strips — a mix of Peranakan restaurants, bak kut teh stalls, and hipster brunch spots — are all within a 10-minute stroll. East Coast Park itself, with its cycling paths, seafood restaurants, and beachside lawns, is accessible in about five minutes on foot.
Schools & Education
3 primary schools within the 1 km Priority Phase balloting radius.
| School | Type | Distance |
|---|---|---|
| CHIJ (Katong) Primary | primary | Within 1 km |
| Tanjong Katong Primary School | primary | Within 1 km |
| Tao Nan School | primary | Within 1 km |
| Canadian International School (Tanjong Katong) | international | Within 1 km |
| Broadrick Secondary School | secondary | Within 1 km |
| EtonHouse International School (Broadrick) | international | Within 1 km |
| Tanjong Katong Girls' School | secondary | ~1.0 km |
| Haig Girls' School | primary | ~1.2 km |
Facilities
Boutique developments of 40 units are structurally limited in what they can offer — the maintenance pool simply cannot fund a 50-metre lap pool, an air-conditioned badminton dome, or a multi-wing clubhouse. 16 @ Amber delivers the essential private-condo amenity set: a swimming pool, a gym, and landscaped common areas. These are well-maintained and, with only 40 units sharing them, rarely congested. The pool area never resembles a weekend public splash, and peak-hour gym queues are largely unknown.
Buyers upgrading from an HDB flat or renting in the area tend to find the package more than satisfactory for daily living — especially when the development’s location puts East Coast Park’s cycling tracks, seafood pavilions, and open lawns within a five-minute walk. In effect, the park functions as an extension of the development’s recreational offering, even if it does not appear on any facilities list. Residents who value outdoor space over indoor amenities will find 16 @ Amber’s lean facilities a non-issue; those who want a resort-scale compound should look instead at Amber Park or Emerald of Katong nearby.
Unit Sizes & Layout
Transaction data shows a mix of 1- and 2-bedroom configurations in the development, consistent with the boutique format. While transactional volumes are thin — fewer than 10 recorded sales on the open market — the PSF trajectory tells a clear story: from approximately S$1,735 psf in the initial years after TOP, pricing has climbed to around S$2,046 psf in the most recent comparable year, representing roughly 18% appreciation over the holding period. This trajectory tracks the broader Amber Road precinct uplift driven by TEL station openings and new-launch pressure from projects such as Grand Dunman and Emerald of Katong at S$2,537–S$2,640 psf.
Unit sizes at boutique 99-year leasehold projects in D15 from this era tend toward 2-bedroom configurations in the 700–900 sqft range, suited to young couples, dual-income households without children, and investors targeting the strong rental market along the Amber Road corridor. The 97 recorded rental transactions and S$2,900 median rent underline that occupier demand is consistent — the development leases reliably at yields around 4%, competitive for the segment.
| Bedrooms | Transactions | Avg PSF | Avg Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 BR | 4 | $1,919 | $805,750 |
| 1 BR | 1 | $1,648 | $1,100,000 |
| 2 BR | 2 | $1,689 | $1,200,000 |
Pricing & Market Position
Based on 7 recorded transactions, sale prices range from $740,000 to $1,250,000, averaging $960,429.
Rents range from $1,700 to $4,900 per month across 97 rental transactions. Current rental yield sits at approximately 4.1%.
Price Appreciation
From 2021 to 2024, the average PSF has appreciated by 18% (from $1,735 to $2,046 psf).
Neighbourhood Comparison
The most natural comparisons within the Amber Road precinct reveal just how diverse the segment has become since the TEL opened. Amber Park, the freehold SCDA-designed project by Hong Leong, asks around S$2,540 psf with 592 units, resort-scale facilities, and the tenure security of a freehold title — a 25%+ premium over 16 @ Amber’s recent transacted range. Emerald of Katong (S$2,640 psf, 846 units, 99-year from 2023) and Grand Dunman (S$2,537 psf, 1,008 units, 99-year from 2022) both offer newer leases, larger facilities, and stronger near-term upside from their fresh TOP pipelines, but at a significant quantum premium and with maintenance fees to match their amenity scale.
The clearest case for 16 @ Amber over these alternatives is the boutique premium: fewer neighbours, more reliable facility access, and a management committee that is genuinely manageable in scale. For buyers who have lived in a 700+ unit development and found the AGM, the shared-facility queue, and the noise of high density less appealing than they expected, the 40-unit format is a feature rather than a limitation. The trade-off is unambiguous: you pay roughly current-market rate for a sub-scale leasehold without the long-term upside of a freehold title or the rental-income depth of a larger development’s economies of scale.
| Development | Tenure | TOP | Units | ~Avg PSF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 @ AMBER | 2013 | 40 | — | |
| GRAND DUNMAN | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2022 | 2023 | 1,008 | $2,537 |
| EMERALD OF KATONG | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2023 | 2024 | 846 | $2,640 |
| THE CONTINUUM | Freehold | 2023 | 816 | $2,790 |
| TEMBUSU GRAND | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2022 | 2023 | 638 | $2,461 |
| AMBER PARK | Freehold | 2021 | 592 | $2,540 |
Lease Decay Analysis
The 99-year lease runs from 2013, meaning approximately 13 years have already been consumed. Roughly 86 years remain — still comfortably within the range where most banks will offer full financing without restrictions.
| Year | Lease remaining | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 (now) | ~86 years | Full bank financing available |
| 2043 | ~69 years | CPF usage still unrestricted for most buyers |
| 2052 | ~59 years | Approaching 60-year threshold — CPF limits begin for some |
| 2072 | ~39 years | Significant financing restrictions for next buyer |
| 2112 | Expiry | Lease 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 ~76 years remaining, which is still very bankable. The risk profile changes for longer holds.
ShiokNest Scores
Our proprietary scoring system evaluates 16 @ AMBER across multiple dimensions.
What Residents Say
“Love the privacy here — with only 40 units, you actually know your neighbours. Pool is never busy, gym is always available. The Katong vibe outside is hard to beat for weekend mornings.”
— Resident review via EdgeProp
“Good location for families — CHIJ Primary is walking distance and East Coast Park is right there. Facilities are basic but we use the park more than the pool anyway. MRT is a bus ride away, not a walk, so a car helps.”
— Resident review via PropertyGuru
“Quiet and well-maintained for its age. Amber Road area has improved a lot since the TEL opened. Rental tenants like the address — professionals who want Katong lifestyle but can’t afford the freehold condos nearby.”
— Investor owner via 99.co
The consensus across review platforms echoes a consistent profile: residents value the boutique scale, the East Coast location, and the school proximity far more than they value the on-site facilities. Negative feedback centres on the modest amenity set relative to comparably priced larger condos nearby, and on the MRT walk being a genuine consideration rather than a marketing talking point. For the right buyer — one who drives, values privacy, and wants a Katong address for school balloting or lifestyle purposes — the development delivers on its promise with minimal friction.
Strengths & Weaknesses
- Genuine boutique scale — 40 units means uncrowded pool, gym, and common areas always
- Amber Road address: Katong character, Peranakan shophouses, independent F&B on the doorstep
- Three primary schools within 1 km — CHIJ Katong, Tanjong Katong Primary, Tao Nan School
- East Coast Park access in ~5 minutes on foot — effective extension of recreational space
- Strong PSF appreciation trend: ~$1,735 to ~$2,046 psf (roughly 18% since TOP)
- Solid rental yield at 4.05% with 97 rental transactions and $2,900 median rent
- TEL connectivity since 2024 — Tanjong Katong MRT (TE25) at 740m, Marine Parade MRT (TE26) at 850m
- Parkway Parade shopping mall and East Coast Road dining strip within walking distance
- Canadian International School (Tanjong Katong) under 1 km — appeals to expat families
- Meaningful PSF discount vs freehold neighbours Amber Park and The Continuum
- Minimal on-site facilities — pool and gym only; no tennis, function rooms, or clubhouse
- 99-year leasehold from ~2013 (86 years remaining); CPF/financing constraints emerge mid-2040s
- MRT not truly walkable — 740m to Tanjong Katong station is a bus-ride or drive for most
- Very thin transaction volume (7 sales) makes accurate price discovery difficult for buyers and sellers
- No land appreciation upside — boutique 99-year leasehold has limited collective sale potential at 40 units
- Amber Road traffic and road noise can affect lower-floor street-facing units
- Smaller investment community and weaker resale liquidity than 500+ unit developments nearby
- Maintenance fees per unit higher relative to larger developments due to shared fixed costs
Verdict
16 @ Amber is a development that rewards buyers who understand what they are buying: a low-density, well-located address in one of Singapore’s most characterful residential precincts, not a facilities showcase or a new-launch growth story. At a PSF level approaching S$2,000+, it is no longer the bargain it was in the years immediately after TOP — but it remains a meaningful discount to freehold comparables such as The Continuum (S$2,790 psf) and Amber Park (S$2,540 psf), while offering the same neighbourhood, the same school proximity, and the same park access at a lower quantum.
The honest trade-offs are predictable for any boutique 99-year leasehold. The lease clock is running: at 86 years today, CPF usage and financing remain unconstrained, but buyers who plan to hold beyond 20 years should model the re-sale market when the lease dips toward 65 years in the mid-2040s. The TEL opening has structurally improved the MRT picture, but at 740 metres to Tanjong Katong station, this is not a truly walkable connection for daily commuting — most residents will bus or drive to the MRT or simply drive outright.
For investors, the 4.05% gross yield and reliable rental demand from the young-professional Katong demographic make 16 @ Amber a credible income hold. For owner-occupiers — particularly families with primary school children — the school cluster, East Coast Park access, and neighbourhood character are compelling. The question, as always with boutique leasehold, is whether the land-to-unit cost is efficiently priced relative to larger nearby alternatives that may have better long-term collective sale or upgrade optionality.